Los Angeles, Long Beach ports shut down as contract talks stall

June 02, 2023
28 views

Labor actions on Friday shut down the Port of Los Angeles, shown above, as well as the neighboring Long Beach port and some other major West Coast harbors. Negotiations over a new contract covering West Coast dockworkers have deteriorated, leading to Friday’s disruptions.

Southern California dockworkers disrupted cargo activity Friday at the Los Angeles and Long Beach ports — major entry points for the country’s imports — after contract talks deteriorated in recent days, causing the ports to shut down.

The Pacific Maritime Assn., which represents shipping companies and port terminal operators, said the International Longshore and Warehouse Union “is staging concerted and disruptive work actions that have effectively shut down operations” at several terminals in Los Angeles, Long Beach, Oakland, Tacoma and Seattle.

For the record: An earlier version of this article incorrectly referred to the Pacific Maritime Assn. as a union. It is an association representing shipping companies and marine terminal operators.

The union held stop-work meetings Thursday night, and on Friday, members either didn’t show up for work or staged individual work slowdowns. The combination snarled traffic at the ports, forcing terminals to shut down.

Advertisement

The powerful union’s latest work action is the boldest so far to sway contract negotiations that began more than a year ago. More than 22,000 dockworkers and 29 West Coast ports have been working without a contract since July 1.

ILWU Local 13, which represents about 12,000 Southern California dockworkers, said its members have “taken it upon themselves to voice their displeasure with the ocean carriers’ and terminal operators’ position.”

In April, local dockworkers forced an approximately 24-hour shutdown at the Los Angeles and Long Beach ports, exacerbating fears that failure of the high-stakes labor negotiations could bring about a paralyzing strike like the one in 2008.

Source: Los Angeles Times