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Negotiations frozen as West Coast shutdown squeezes companies
Wednesday October 02, 2002
By SIMON AVERY AP Business Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) More than ports from San Diego to Seattle
were shut down Wednesday. So were contract talks between West Coast
dockworkers and their employers after efforts to bring in a federal
mediator collapsed.
With negotiations scheduled for Wednesday canceled, union
leaders were contemplating what their next step would be, Steve
Stallone, a spokesman for the International Longshore and Warehouse
Union that represents some 10,500 dockworkers, said Tuesday night.
The collapse of talks comes just as businesses across the
country, from toy manufacturers to auto makers, are beginning to
feel squeezed by the shutdown of all 29 West Coast ports, which
handled more than $320 billion worth of imports and exports in
2001.
``This is the two-minute warning for the Christmas season. We
got hit at the most vulnerable moment,'' said Charlie Woo, founder
and chief executive of Megatoys in Los Angeles, which has $750,000
worth of toys in transit. ``The customer wants my stuff, but it's
on the water.''
The Pacific Maritime Association, which represents shipping
companies and terminal operators, locked out about 10,500 members
of the ILWU on Sunday, claiming workers had engaged in an illegal
slowdown.
On Tuesday, a federal mediation session fell apart before it
began. Union representatives stormed out, saying their employers
showed up with ``gun-toting security guards.''
Jim Spinosa, the union's president and chief negotiator, accused
the PMA of sabotaging the session. ``PMA's lockout is holding a gun
to the head of the American economy and now they move to aim real
guns at us,'' he said.
A spokesman for the association said the guards were there to
ensure the safety of the association's president and chief
negotiator.
``They have been deployed in a very discreet manner, and we
would hope the union would understand these circumstances,''
spokesman Steve Sugerman said.
Peter J. Hurtgen, director of the Federal Mediation and
Conciliation Services, an independent government organization, said
the guards breached mediation protocol.
If the standoff drags on, ``things are not going to be arriving
on shelves when they are supposed to,'' said Erik Autor,
international trade counsel at the National Retail Federation.
Many merchants have protected themselves by shipping some
holiday goods in advance by aircraft. But air shipping is expensive
and stores could pass the costs along to customers.
The auto industry relies almost exclusively on container ships
because most parts are large.
``A day's worth of disruption is not enough to create enormous
concern, but if it extends, yes, there will be some difficulties,''
said Xavier Dominicis, a spokesman for Toyota Motor Sales USA in
Torrance.
Sony's electronics unit is considering bringing more goods in by
air. Virtually all the Japanese company's products use at least
some components from Asia.
Sunkist Growers, a marketing cooperative of 6,000 California and
Arizona farmers, expects to lose about $2 million in exports to
Asia each week the disruption continues. Air freight is not a
competitive option because standard 40-pound fruit cartons are too
expensive to send by air, Sunkist spokesman Mike Wootton said.
Railroads and trucking companies that link ports and the rest of
the country are also losing business.
Burlington Northern Santa Fe stopped westbound shipments from
Chicago to avoid having them stack up on the West Coast. And Yellow
Corp., a trucking company in Overland Park, Kan., has seen a drop
of 10 percent to 15 percent in its West Coast business, chief
executive William Zollars said.
Air freight operators have reason for optimism. United Airlines
spokesman Joe Hopkins said there has already been a small increase
in cargo business from the Far East to the U.S. mainland in the
past couple of days.
In a letter to President Bush, the West Coast Waterfront
Coalition, which represents retailers and transportation firms,
urged the White House to take ``whatever steps are necessary'' to
reopen the ports. Even if the ports reopened immediately, it would
take a month for companies to get their supply chains working
normally again, said the group's executive director, Robin Lanier.
(Copyright 2002 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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