“United States Maritime Alliance … refuses to address
a half-century of wage subjugation,” the union said in a statement. The United
States Maritime Alliance, known as USMX, represents employers of the East and
Gulf Coast longshore industry. USMX did not immediately comment.
If union members walk off the job at ports stretching
from Maine to Texas, it would be the first coast-wide ILA strike since 1977,
affecting ports that handle about half the nation’s ocean shipping. A source said no negotiations were taking
place Sunday and none are currently planned before the midnight Monday
deadline. The union said previously the strike would not impact military
cargo shipments or cruise ship traffic.
The White House did not immediately comment on the
union’s statement.
Earlier on Sunday, President Joe Biden said
he did not intend to intervene to prevent a walkout if dock workers
failed to secure a new contract by an Oct. 1 deadline.
“It’s collective
bargaining. I don’t believe in Taft-Hartley,” he told reporters. Presidents can
intervene in labor disputes that threaten national security or safety by imposing
an 80-day cooling-off period under the federal Taft-Hartley Act. Reuters first reported on Sept. 17 that Biden did not plan to
invoke the Taft-Hartley provision, citing a White House official.
A strike could stop the flow of everything from food
to automobiles at major ports – in a dispute that could jeopardize
jobs and stoke inflation weeks ahead of the U.S. presidential election. Business Roundtable, which represents major
U.S. business leaders, said it was “deeply concerned about the potential strike
at the East Coast and Gulf Coast ports.”
The group warned a labor stoppage could cost the U.S.
economy billions of dollars daily “hurting American businesses, workers and
consumers across the country. We urge both sides to come to an agreement before
Monday night’s deadline.”
For months, the union has threatened
to shut down the 36 ports it covers if employers like container ship operator
Maersk and its APM Terminals North America do not deliver significant wage
increases and stop terminal automation projects.
The dispute is worrying businesses that rely on ocean
shipping to export their wares, or secure crucial imports.
On Friday, Biden administration
officials met with the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX) employer group to
directly convey “that they need to be at the table and negotiating in good
faith fairly and quickly” – a message it delivered earlier to the ILA.
The USMX employer group has accused the ILA
of refusing to negotiate.