The
International Longshore and Warehouse Union and International Container
Terminal Services settled a more than decade’s long dispute involving the
operation of Portland, Oregon’s sole container terminal which forced the ILWU
to file for bankruptcy in September 2023. The ILWU had previously been found
liable for damages caused to the terminal’s operations due to a series of
“unlawful labor actions,” meant to coerce the terminal into changing work rules
in favor of the union.
The two sides in the dispute as well
as the International Transport Workers Federation reported that the agreement
has been reached to settle the dispute which started in September 2012 and has been in the courts since
2017. The case had been pending a retrial on the damages award but was stayed
by the 2023 bankruptcy filing.
“The
ILWU settlement arises from the parties’ participation in several days of
mediation during the ILWU’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy case,” they reported. The
bankruptcy will be voluntarily dismissed as part of the terms of the
settlement. ICTSI which alleged it had lost millions of dollars in business and
was forced to abandon terminal operations will receive $20.5 million under the
terms of the settlement.
The
National Labor Relations Board had sided with ICTSI in 2015 saying that the
union had encouraged members to operate in a “slow and nonproductive manner.” The dispute was an inter-union rivalry
that has also more recently appeared in Seattle. Electricians from rival
union IBEW Local 48 were assigned the job of plugging and unplugging
refrigerated containers, a job the ILWU asserted should be handled by its
members while handling and moving containers in Portland.
The ILWU
wanted the two positions handling the electrical connections reassigned to its
members and starting in 2012 organized
slowdowns as it demanded the Port of Portland reassign the tasks. The NLRB
in its finding said the union had refused to hoist cranes in a bypass mode,
refused to move two 20-foot containers at a time, and refused other tasks that
reduced the efficiency of the terminal. Carriers by 2017 had largely suspended
operations to the terminal.
ICTSI
caught in the jurisdictional fight between the two unions sued the ILWU and in
2019 a federal jury ruled in its favor. The jury initially awarded the operator
$94 million in damages, but in 2020 it was reduced to $19 million. A retrial on
damages was pending.
The ILWU
last year filed bankruptcy saying it only had less than $12 million in assets.
They said the bankruptcy would be used to implement a plan to resolve the
long-running dispute.
“The ITF welcomes this important
development and commends the unity and strength of our brothers and sisters in
the ILWU during this long and uncertain period,” said Paddy Crumlin,
International President of the ITF.
Similar inter-union jurisdictional
disputes have plagued other ports. In Seattle, a similar dispute centers on which
union can handle maintenance and repair work and specifically tasks related to
the use of cold ironing shore power at Terminal 5. In April 2023, the NLRB
ruled against the ILWU in that dispute which is also in the courts. It also
threatened to derail the master contract negotiations for all the West Coast
ports in 2023
Long-pending dispute to an end; ITF
welcomes it; inter-union jurisdictional disputes plagued ports