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WSWS : Workers
Struggles : United
States
US dock talks reach agreement on health care benefits
By a correspondent
10 September 2002
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Negotiators for West Coast shipping interests and the International
Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) reached agreement September
4 over a health benefit plan. The ILWU announced, This is
the first step in a long road to an agreement.
Several days earlier, the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA)
and the union made a similar announcement claiming the benefit
issue had been resolved, only to have the union retract after
the company tacked on a change in the arbitration procedure. It
is not clear to what degree the disagreement has been resolved.
Both sides have continued negotiations, moving on to technology
issues which have proven to be the most difficult to resolve.
The West Coast Waterfront Coalition, comprised of giant US
retailers who import a large percentage of goods through the 29
West Coast ports, also voiced its opinion that the agreement on
benefits was a good sign in terms of making progress, but
its also good that both sides have taken down the rhetoric
about who is stonewalling and not bargaining in good faith.
The coalition earlier this year met secretly with the Bush
administration to request that the government impose Taft-Hartley
provisions on the dockworkers. The ILWU later publicly exposed
the threats made by Labor Department official Andrew Siff, who
told ILWU officials that the Bush administration was prepared
to occupy West Coast ports with the National Guard and use Navy
personnel to move cargo if the union attempted a slowdown. He
also threatened that the Bush administration would seek congressional
legislation to declare the ILWU a monopoly, break up the union
into separate bargaining units for each port and bar any joint
strikes.
Meanwhile, a dispute emerged between the ILWU and the International
Association of Machinists (IAM). The machinists union charged
that the ILWU is raiding IAM members at the ports.
The IAM charged that the ILWU is seeking, through talks with the
PMA, to have about 80 IAM members transferred to the ILWU.
The ILWU wants to place all jobs on the docks under its jurisdiction
in return for agreement to let the PMA implement new technology
measures that will eliminate large numbers of ILWU members
jobs. According to an IAM spokesman, the ILWU has crossed
swords with other unions as well over the issue of absorbing
its members.
See Also:
US dockworkers rally in Los Angeles
[5 September 2002]
Bush threatens to use troops
against West Coast dockworkers
[30 August 2002]
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