Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

PMA and ILWU take West Coast port feud to social media

Labor and management groups make conflicting claims about work conditions at Port of Seattle

seattle DSC_7748.jpeg

The labor dispute at West Coast container ports grew messier over the weekend, as port operators claimed that workers had walked off the job at the Port of Seattle on Friday and Saturday, but unions explicitly refuted that claim.

The feuding claims are the latest step in more than a year of tense negotiations to renew workers’ contracts. In other recent steps, workers likewise withheld their labor at the ports of Los Angeles, Long Beach, Oakland, and Seattle on various dates in April and June.


Those actions triggered delays in import and export container movements, and prompted calls from retail trade groups such as the American Apparel & Footwear Association (AAFA), National Retail Federation (NRF), and Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA) for the White House to oversee contract talks.

That debate continued today, when the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA), which represents the interests of ocean carriers and terminal operators, accused the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) of staging disruptive work actions that led to containerized terminal operations coming to a halt.

“Yesterday at the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, the ILWU resumed its past practice of withholding lashers from terminals at the nation’s largest port complex, resulting in vessels having to miss their scheduled departures. The Union also did not fill orders for labor from several terminal operators despite the fact they were placed properly and on time,” the PMA said in a statement posted to social media.

While those actions do not rise to the level of a full strike against the ports, they produce nearly the same effect. According to the PMA, union members slow down logistics flows in the following ways: delaying the daily standard dispatch process; withholding specialized workers, such as cargo-handling equipment operators or lashers; making unfounded health and safety claims; deliberately conducting inspections that are not routine, not scheduled, and done in a way that disrupt terminal operations; and improperly coordinating lunch and unit breaks to drain all labor from terminals at the same time.

However, the ILWU specifically refuted those claims.

“Despite what you are hearing from PMA, West Coast ports are open as we continue to work under our expired collective bargaining agreement,” ILWU President Willie Adams said in a social media post on Saturday.

According to Adams, the PMA has been using the media “to leverage one-sided information in attempt to influence the process.” But meanwhile, the union’s 22,000 longshore workers at 29 U.S. West Coast ports have been working under an expired contract since July 1, 2022. 

The union leader said that the ILWU and PMA continue to negotiate the collective bargaining agreement and are committed to reaching an agreement.

The Port of Seattle has made no public statement about current work conditions.

 

 

 

 

Recent

More Stories

Just 29% of supply chain organizations are prepared to meet future readiness demands

Just 29% of supply chain organizations are prepared to meet future readiness demands

Just 29% of supply chain organizations have the competitive characteristics they’ll need for future readiness, according to a Gartner survey released Tuesday. The survey focused on how organizations are preparing for future challenges and to keep their supply chains competitive.

Gartner surveyed 579 supply chain practitioners to determine the capabilities needed to manage the “future drivers of influence” on supply chains, which include artificial intelligence (AI) achievement and the ability to navigate new trade policies. According to the survey, the five competitive characteristics are: agility, resilience, regionalization, integrated ecosystems, and integrated enterprise strategy.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

screen shot of returns apps on different devices

Optoro: 69% of shoppers admit to “wardrobing” fraud

With returns now a routine part of the shopping journey, technology provider Optoro says a recent survey has identified four trends influencing shopper preferences and retailer priorities.

First, 54% of retailers are looking for ways to increase their financial recovery from returns. That’s because the cost to return a purchase averages 27% of the purchase price, which erases as much as 50% of the sales margin. But consumers have their own interests in mind: 76% of shoppers admit they’ve embellished or exaggerated the return reason to avoid a fee, a 39% increase from 2023 to 204.

Keep ReadingShow less
robots carry goods through a warehouse

Fortna: rethink your distribution strategy for 2025

Facing an evolving supply chain landscape in 2025, companies are being forced to rethink their distribution strategies to cope with challenges like rising cost pressures, persistent labor shortages, and the complexities of managing SKU proliferation.

But according to the systems integrator Fortna, businesses can remain competitive if they focus on five core areas:

Keep ReadingShow less
shopper uses smartphone in retail store

EY lists five ways to fortify omnichannel retail

In the fallout from the pandemic, the term “omnichannel” seems both out of date and yet more vital than ever, according to a study from consulting firm EY.

That clash has come as retailers have been hustling to adjust to pandemic swings like a renewed focus on e-commerce, then swiftly reimagining store experiences as foot traffic returned. But even as the dust settles from those changes, retailers are now facing renewed questions about how best to define their omnichannel strategy in a world where customers have increasing power and information.

Keep ReadingShow less
artistic image of a building roof

BCG: tariffs would accelerate change in global trade flows

Geopolitical rivalries, alliances, and aspirations are rewiring the global economy—and the imposition of new tariffs on foreign imports by the U.S. will accelerate that process, according to an analysis by Boston Consulting Group (BCG).

Without a broad increase in tariffs, world trade in goods will keep growing at an average of 2.9% annually for the next eight years, the firm forecasts in its report, “Great Powers, Geopolitics, and the Future of Trade.” But the routes goods travel will change markedly as North America reduces its dependence on China and China builds up its links with the Global South, which is cementing its power in the global trade map.

Keep ReadingShow less