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Truckers call for port
strike
Journal
of Commerce
Wednesday, June 23, 2004
By: Bill Mongelluzzo - The JOURNAL of
COMMERCE ONLINE
LOS ANGELES - Truckers are again calling for a nationwide
strike
to protest high fuel prices and working conditions at the nation's ports.
The
strike,
slated for the week of June 28-July 4, coincides with the start of the
peak shipping season.
The movement appears to be a loosely-coordinated effort by harbor truck
drivers from California to the East Coast to pressure shipping lines to
pay higher diesel fuel surcharges. In flyers printed in English and
Spanish, the drivers also cited poor working conditions at the nation's
ports and a recent court decision that will open the border to Mexican
truck drivers under the North American Free Trade Agreement.
At the same time, the Teamsters issued an open letter to the steamship
industry urging lines to compensate drivers for high fuel costs or face a
"long hot summer on the docks."
The Teamsters for several years have been attempting to organize the
mostly independent truckers at the nation's ports. But the union denied it
is behind the calls for a
strike,
said Chuck Mack, director of the Teamsters Port Division.
Mack said the union is urging shipping lines to address the root causes of
driver discontent. Drivers need higher pay, compensatory fuel surcharges
when the price of diesel spikes and compensation when the drivers wait in
line at marine terminals or when they shuttle containers inside marine
terminals.
"The level of frustration among drivers is high," Mack said. "All it takes
is a spike in fuel costs or delays at the terminals to set them off."
Union officials met June 14 in Washington with port drivers and local
leaders from 18 ports from Los Angeles-Long Beach to New York-New Jersey
to discuss the fuel situation. Following the meeting, Teamsters President
James Hoffa in a statement warned carriers that "without a swift response
drivers are likely to park their trucks until conditions improve."
Truckers in May shut down the Port of Oakland for a week, and there were
scattered demonstrations in Los Angeles-Long Beach, Houston and Hampton
Roads, Va.
"They have no way to address these issues so they take job actions. They
stop working," Mack said.
Harbor truckers in the past week have been distributing flyers at ports on
the West, Gulf and East coasts calling for a nationwide
strike
beginning next Monday.
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