02-07-2015, 07:45 AM
FYI: (*Update - Snipped - More at link)
Don't hoard toilet paper yet: maritime shipping to Hawaii continues to flow despite a significant worsening of the labor-management faceoff on the West Coast.
"We are working today in Long Beach and Seattle without any problems," says Jeff Hull, a spokesman for Matson Inc., the largest maritime shipping line to Hawaii. Matson, which has operatonal headquarters in Oakland, Calif., has its own terminal at Long Beach.
The Pacific Maritime Association, representing West Coast terminals, escalated its dispute with the International Longshore & Warehouse Union by announcing that weekend vessel loading and unloading would be "temporarily suspended" this weekend.
"After three months of union slowdowns, it makes no sense to pay extra for less work," said PMA spokesman Wade Gates.
PMA exempted Jones Act carriers, however. And that exempts all the Hawaii shipping lines - Matson, Horizon and Pasha - as well as cruise ships.
What the order does affect is cargo from Asia waiting to be loaded onto trucks or railcars for shipment east across the U.S. mainland.
The ILWU said PMA was no longer requesting crane operators to unload the more than two dozen ships now anchored in Los Angeles-Long Beach harbor. Earlier, PMA accused ILWU of withholding crane operators when they were requested.
Terminals this weekend are still free to clear out the cargo already sitting in the yard, which means, if the two sides were actually to settle, they could more rapidly catch up and normalize operations.
PMA also said its order limiting work on the docks would expire at 8 a.m. Monday.
http://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/story/28051...bor-strife
Don't hoard toilet paper yet: maritime shipping to Hawaii continues to flow despite a significant worsening of the labor-management faceoff on the West Coast.
"We are working today in Long Beach and Seattle without any problems," says Jeff Hull, a spokesman for Matson Inc., the largest maritime shipping line to Hawaii. Matson, which has operatonal headquarters in Oakland, Calif., has its own terminal at Long Beach.
The Pacific Maritime Association, representing West Coast terminals, escalated its dispute with the International Longshore & Warehouse Union by announcing that weekend vessel loading and unloading would be "temporarily suspended" this weekend.
"After three months of union slowdowns, it makes no sense to pay extra for less work," said PMA spokesman Wade Gates.
PMA exempted Jones Act carriers, however. And that exempts all the Hawaii shipping lines - Matson, Horizon and Pasha - as well as cruise ships.
What the order does affect is cargo from Asia waiting to be loaded onto trucks or railcars for shipment east across the U.S. mainland.
The ILWU said PMA was no longer requesting crane operators to unload the more than two dozen ships now anchored in Los Angeles-Long Beach harbor. Earlier, PMA accused ILWU of withholding crane operators when they were requested.
Terminals this weekend are still free to clear out the cargo already sitting in the yard, which means, if the two sides were actually to settle, they could more rapidly catch up and normalize operations.
PMA also said its order limiting work on the docks would expire at 8 a.m. Monday.
http://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/story/28051...bor-strife