Victory
To The West Coast Dockworkers (ILWU)- All Labor Must Stand In Solidarity Now!
Peter Paul Markin comment:
As the author below notes, a long-time longshoreman himself, this West Coast fight by a last remaining union bastion from heroic struggles to form unions in this country back in the 1930s is a last ditch test to try to revitalize the organized labor movement or essentially crush militant unionism for a long time. The ILWU itself only became a powerful labor union after it won the union hiring hall in the famous San Francisco General Strike of 1934. Plenty has been written of late about how the working class (and apparently a good section of middle class too) has fallen behind in the great gap that has been created by the rich to keep working people in their place. No small part of that gap has been as a result of the demise of the organized labor movement which used to set the standard for all labor, organized and unorganized. Now is the time for all labor, organized and unorganized, to stand in solidarity with the West Coast dockers. Then the rest of us should do like the old labor organizer Joe Hill said- organize, organize like hell. We made the wealth let's take it back.
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Dock workers,
shippers face off at the Port of Oakland
February
18, 2015 Updated: February 18, 2015 9:32am
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West
Coast ports are badly congested. Ships are backed up, unable to find a berth to
unload their cargo. Longshore contract negotiations are deadlocked between the
shipowners and terminal operators of the Pacific Maritime Association and
dockworkers represented by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union.
With big retailers and agribusiness screaming, President Obama has sent in
Labor Secretary Tom Perez.
The
PMA’s tough negotiating ploy has intentionally created a port crisis. The PMA,
echoed by the business press, claims greedy workers engaging in work slowdowns
are to blame. Yet the employers, after dragging out negotiations for nine
months, have closed ports this past holiday weekend. They previously had ended
night work to stop paying overtime and shift premiums, thus employers have
slashed available work time in one week by 75 percent. In 2002, when PMA locked
out longshore workers and shut down West Coast ports, the media conflated it
with a workers’ strike. Is this a bad media rerun?
What’s really brewing here is an assault on one of
the last bastions of union power left in the United States, the ILWU. In the
last five years, the ILWU has faced union-busting attacks by mining titan Rio
Tinto and the ABCD grain monopolies (Archer Daniels Midland, Bunge Limited,
Cargill Inc. and Louis Dreyfus Commodities), which control 90 percent of the
world’s grain distribution. In both cases, the union conceded key contract
provisions, and now maritime monopolies are smelling blood.
Two of the biggest global port employers, Ports
America Inc. and Stevedoring Services of America were until recently owned in
large part by the insurance monolith AIG and Goldman Sachs, respectively. This
is “Wall Street on the waterfront,” and they’re out to gut the power of the
ILWU, the union hiring hall, and curtail union action by using arbitrators.
Yet when longshore workers stop work, it’s often
because of safety issues in a dangerous industry whose rate of work-related
fatalities exceeds that of firefighters.
When Bay Area longshore workers shut down ports to
protest Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s union-busting activities, that state’s
AFL-CIO called the ILWU “the moral compass of the labor movement.” And when
Oakland police nearly killed Iraq War veteran Scott Olsen during an Occupy
movement protest, 30,000 outraged demonstrators marched into the port, closing
it in protest and in solidarity with longshore workers battling the nonunion
Export Grain Terminal in Longview, Wash. Shades of the 1934 San Francisco
General Strike frightened West Coast port employers.
ILWU longshore jobs pay decent wages and benefits,
but far less than employers claim. If a rising tide can lift all boats, then
these jobs and benefits will continue to set standards for other workers. But,
if Wall Street on the waterfront breaks the ILWU, wages and living standards
will be driven down for all.
Don’t forget the lesson of PATCO, the air traffic
controllers union destroyed by Ronald Reagan, while other unions sat idly by.
The consequences devastated the entire labor movement. And, in 2012, President
Obama sent Coast Guard vessels against the ILWU protesting a scab ship at the
Export Grain Terminal. Longshore workers need to use their power to stop
concessionary contracts, and all working people should have their back.
Jack Heyman, a retired ILWU member, has worked in the
San Francisco Bay Area as a longshoreman and boatman for over 30 years. He
chairs the Transport Workers Solidarity Committee. (www.transportworkers.org)