Categories: U.S. and Canada

Pacific Northwest longshore workers reject cutbacks

International Longshore and Warehouse Union locals in the Pacific Northwest continue to work at terminals owned by the Grain Handlers Association after three out of four terminal owners imposed the agri-bosses highly concessionary “last, best and final” offer on Dec. 27. By nearly 94 percent, ILWU members rejected that package, which the ILWU reports demanded “more than 750 changes to a contract that’s made the industry successful for the past 80 years.”

Clearly this is a temporary situation. Nearly 3,000 ILWU members work at grain terminals in Seattle, Tacoma and Vancouver, Wash., and Portland, Ore., owned by the huge conglomerates that profit from and control the food supply trade of the world.

One of the richest terminal owners, the CHS/Cargill joint venture TEMCO, split from the Grain Handlers Association to continue negotiations with ILWU and extend the terms of the old contract, which expired on Sept. 30. Ft.com reported the U.S. farming cooperative CHS’ net profits exceeded that of its TEMCO partner, Cargill, as well as that of terminal owners Louis Dreyfus and Bunge.

International agribusiness giant Bunge is the major partner in the highly automated Export Grain Terminal in Longview, Wash. Bunge’s profits doubled in the quarter ending Sept. 30.

The EGT contract accepted by the ILWU International last year — while spurning a massive Occupy and labor solidarity mobilization poised to join the fight — set the concession pattern the ILWU is now fighting.

Grain Handler Association members have hired the Gettier scab-herding corporate security firm in an attempt to strong-arm longshore workers in case of a lockout or strike. But a militant mood is building among workers in the global supply chain.

Long-suffering ILWU clerks struck last month, closing the Los Angeles and Long Beach, Calif., docks for eight days. Warehouse workers and Walmart workers walked off their jobs to demand better conditions. And international solidarity pickets in Newark, N.J., and Charleston, S.C., challenged goods shipped from the clothing factory in Bangladesh where mostly women workers died in a fire on Nov. 24.

Cheryl LaBash

Cheryl.LaBash@workers.org

Share
Published by
Cheryl LaBash

Recent Posts

PDF of November 21 print issue

Download the PDF Resistance grows as West Asia war widens Resistance grows as West Asia…

November 21, 2024

Kenneth Foster: A victim of racist, ironic injustice

New Boston, Texas Kenneth Foster was unjustly sentenced to life in prison without the possibility…

November 20, 2024

New York City: ’Gaza, Gaza you will rise!’

One year after Israel's raid of Al-Shaifa Hospital, protesters held a vigil to honor Gaza…

November 20, 2024

UAW members to top leaders: Divest from genocide!

In the morning of Nov. 12, a new group, Engineers Against Apartheid, held banners and…

November 20, 2024

U.S. schemes to control Haiti are failing

Misery and hunger are afflicting millions of Haitians. According to the Integrated Food Security Phase…

November 20, 2024

Resistance grows as West Asia war widens

For over a year, the capitalist media has falsely portrayed Israel’s genocidal war against the…

November 20, 2024