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time to stock up on toilet paper?
#1
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2014/06/23/bil...ract-ends/

LOS ANGELES – The West Coast ports that are America's gateway for hundreds of billions of dollars of trade with Asia and beyond are no stranger to labor unrest and even violence.

Now, the contract that covers nearly 20,000 dockworkers is set to expire, and businesses that trade in everything from apples to iPhones are worried about disruptions just as the crush of cargo for the back-to-school and holiday seasons begins.










With contentious issues including benefits and job security on the table, smooth sailing is no guarantee.

On one side is the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, with its tradition of fierce activism dating to the Great Depression, when two of its members were killed during a strike. On the other is the Pacific Maritime Association, which represents shipping lines and operators of terminals at 29 West Coast ports.

Both acknowledge that they are unlikely to agree on a new contract before the current one expires June 30, but they plan to negotiate past that deadline. That would fit the pattern from contract talks in 2008 and 2002. In 2002, negotiators didn't reach an agreement until around Thanksgiving, following an impasse that led to a 10-day lockout and a big disruption in trade.

The union's total control over the labor pool means huge bargaining leverage, which negotiators have parlayed into white-collar wages and perks for blue-collar work. A full-time longshoreman earns about $130,000 a year, while foremen earn about $210,000, according to employer data. Workers pay nearly nothing for health coverage that includes no premiums and $1 prescriptions.

Neither side has publicly discussed progress on negotiations that began May 12 in San Francisco, which is headquarters to the union and the maritime association.

Twelve years ago, the shutdown had a lasting impact on how products moved in and out of the United States. Hulking cranes idled. Ships anchored in San Francisco Bay and outside ports from Los Angeles to Seattle. Economists estimated the impact at $1 billion each day.

Even after trade resumed, retailers — with their just-in-time supply chain — worried that West Coast ports risked becoming a bottleneck. Companies looked to Gulf Coast and East Coast ports, which courted them by upgrading facilities.

"They can't afford to have their goods hung up either out on the sea or on the docks," said Jonathan Gold, vice president of supply chain and customs policy at the National Retail Federation.

Between 2002 and last year, the portion of shipping containers that came into the U.S. through West Coast ports dropped from 50 percent to 44 percent, according to a study by Martin Associates, a firm that analyzes transportation systems. Imports to the Gulf of Mexico and the Northeast increased.

Even so, West Coast ports handled cargo worth $892 billion in 2013 alone, according to trade data compiled by the U.S. Census Bureau.

Worries over the current negotiations have prompted some stores to route shipments away from the West Coast, Gold said. Other importers planning for fall and winter shopping have shipped early to beat the contract's expiration date.

The maritime association warns that labor peace is essential to keeping West Coast ports competitive, especially with an expansion of the Panama Canal that will allow larger vessels to reach East Coast markets directly.

The union is not persuaded, at least not publicly.

"The competitiveness argument is an old saw that gets trotted out every time there's a negotiation," said union spokesman Craig Merrilees. "The claim has generally been used in an effort to extract concessions from the union members."

One area where the Pacific Maritime Association is looking for concessions is benefits. According to the PMA, the cost of benefits more than doubled over the past decade, reaching $93,200 per registered worker in fiscal year 2013.

During these negotiations, a new incentive is in play: In 2018, a 40 percent tax on the value of "Cadillac" health plans above a certain threshold kicks in under the Affordable Care Act — and the union's coverage qualifies.

Last July, workers and retirees picketed in Long Beach and in Tacoma, Washington, complaining that some families were shouldering tens of thousands of medical bills the health plan was not paying.

Employers said legitimate claims were being paid, but they were scrutinizing tens of millions of dollars of treatments that were likely fraudulent, including phantom appointments and charges for cosmetic surgery.

Other bargaining issues include what jobs will remain under union control, the introduction of technology that could make some jobs obsolete, and on-the-job safety measures.
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#2
I like the fact that longshoreman make only 130k a year and will need a raise! thanks guys for making goods more expensive to ship.
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#3
Anyone found a good tree / leaf for wiping. Might need an alternative at some point.
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#4
and deserve every dime...... many work part time for years hoping for a full time gig - dangerous work

Id go after Matson,young brothers and the jones act first - can you spell monopoly - the laborers getting a piece of the monopoly pie by threat - good for them

meanwhile we can by our tp at amazon, usps priority - grin
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#5
Anyone found a good tree / leaf for wiping. Might need an alternative at some point.

Hemp-based paper is superior in every way to tree-based paper, but all hemp is legally "drugs", which is why so much money is spent on helicopter flights when it would be a far better investment to create a new industry that reduced our dependence on foreign oil.

See? The System Works -- just not for you, so much.
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#6
System works for carpet baggers like this A&B board member - his other biz bought out a west maui hotel last week - think he works for 130k?

Douglas M. Pasquale
Founder and Chief Executive Officer
Capstone Enterprises Corporation
Retired Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer
Nationwide Health Properties, Inc. (Healthcare Real Estate Investment Trust)
Director & Committee Member: Audit (Chair), Nominating and Corporate Governance Alexander and Baldwin.

Douglas M. Pasquale is a director of Ventas, Inc., since the acquisition of Nationwide Health Properties, Inc. (formerly NHP) in July 2011. From 2009 until July 2011, he served as chairman of the board and chief executive officer of NHP, a publicly traded real estate investment trust (REIT) that invests in senior housing facilities, long-term care facilities and medical office buildings throughout the United States. Pasquale was appointed chairman in May 2009 and also served as president and chief executive officer since 2004.

Pasquale has been a director of the Alexander & Baldwin board since 2005, and is also a member of the board of trustees of the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum.

Pasquale received a bachelor’s degree in business and a master’s degree in business administration from the University of Colorado.

here is the rest of the group - not to many poor folk in the rank - think they give a rats .... about Puna? http://alexanderbaldwin.com/our-company/...directors/
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#7
The US is struggling with modernization and the displacement of workers that is developing.

With longshoremen, the battle is to keep back automated container facilities. Chinese container ports may have about a dozen human workers. The rest is all automated. With California allowing the licensing of cars that drive themselves, it won't be long for the automated driver to start replacing truck drivers. The autonomous driving vehicle is proving to drive with a much better safety record, doesn't get tired, doesn't need health insurance, doesn't need vacations, and reduces the chance for costly accidents.

The unions only have one tactic, to go on strike. This has worked because there weren't any good alternatives. The west coast longshoreman are fighting tooth-and-nail against automated container facilities and by obstruction, have been able to hold their position. However, this tactic is falling apart. There is a gigantic automated container facility being built in Mexico, which will be tied to the NAFTA highway, being called the North American Supercorridor. If you see, the container ports are in Mexico and it will be twelve lanes into Kansas, distribution to both coasts and Canada from there. The US longshoremen are fighting a losing battle.

http://www.greatdreams.com/political/NAF...IGHWAY.jpg

"This island Hawaii on this island Earth"
*Japanese tourist on bus through Pahoa, "Is this still America?*
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#8
In the old days, farmers kept a stack of dried corncobs (after they had been shelled) in the outhouse.

That wouldn't work around here though, as you'd constantly have people yelling from the bathroom, "Hey! Are these GMO corncobs?"
"I'm at that stage in life where I stay out of discussions. Even if you say 1+1=5, you're right - have fun." - Keanu Reeves
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#9
There will two classes in the US is my prediction - the corporate class and the poor. The middle class and "white" collar fantasy over

in the rest of the world the middle class is known as the working class by the way

Sooooooo happy to be in puna on my self sufficient hide away .....Thank you Pele..... Puna having the right idea all along. Opting out the best way to manage imho.

Off to feed the Talapia....... my best to the longshorepersons....
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#10
Longshoremen in Hawaii are also covered by ILWU, so if there's a strike, we won't be getting anything, not even from foreign ports.

><(((*> ~~~~ ><(("> ~~~~ ><'> ~~~~ >(>
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