Labor talks at
U.S. ports on the East Coast and Gulf of Mexico are a looming risk
for retailers, manufacturers and other shippers already grappling with longer
transit times and higher costs.
The International
Longshoremen’s Association contract covering 45,000 dockworkers at three
dozenports stretching from Maine to Texas expires on Sept. 30. If there is no deal by then, the union
could call a strike that would hit during the vital holiday container shipping
season and labor-friendly U.S. President Joe Biden’s bid for reelection.
The ILA on Monday 10
June called off this week’s planned start of talks with the U.S. Maritime
Alliance, citing one member of that employer group’s use of automation
technology in violation of prior agreements ILA President Harold Daggett previously warned that members would
strike if a deal is not reached before the current contract lapses. He has
alerted locals at vital trade hubs like New York/New Jersey and Houston to be
ready to strike on Oct. 1, the union said.
Seaport labor strikes
are rare in the United States, but noise and anxiety during contract talks runs
high. That’s because any work slowdown or stoppage would affect billions of
dollars of products ranging from food and medicine to furniture and factory
equipment.
Port of Los Angeles
Executive Director Gene Seroka on Wednesday said this week’s ILA developments
were not unusual. “During these negotiations, there are stops and
starts,” Seroka said.
Ports on the East
Coast and Gulf of Mexico had a slight market share edge over rival West
Coast ports in May. That’s when Vincent Golebiowski, global head of
supply chain for Coach and Kate Spade handbag seller Tapestry, told Reuters he
was more focused on making sure he wasn’t losing transit time rerouting
shipments away from the Suez Canal due to Houthi militant
attacks in the Red Sea.
This week’s strike
warning from the ILA is certain to test the nerves of shippers like
Golebiowski. Seroka on Wednesday said some importers have shifted
“fractional amounts” of cargo from East and Gulf Coast ports to Los
Angeles as a hedge against the U.S. contract talks, Red Sea disruptions and
Panama Canal passage restrictions.
Los Angeles and other
West Coast ports lost market share in the lead-up to the
International Longshore and Warehouse Union’s contract deal
in June last year. That
agreement capped 13 months of start-and-stop talks.
“There was a lot of saber-rattling, but goods
moved,” said Chris Jones, an
executive vice president at trade data provider Descartes Systems
Group DSG.TO.