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BOSTON | Weeks after a critical West Coast port complex was crippled by a few hundred striking workers, the East Coast is bracing for a possible walkout numbering thousands that could drastically limit 15 ports from Massachusetts to Texas, including Jacksonville. The latest talks between shipping companies and dockworkers broke down Tuesday, less than two weeks before the contract expires Dec. 29, leading to worries a strike was inevitable. The National Retail Federation wrote to President Barack Obama this week to ask him to use “all means necessary” to head off a strike, which they fear could have catastrophic ripple effects nationwide. “We foresee this as a national economic emergency, to be honest,” said Jonathan Gold, the group’s vice president of supply chain and customs policy. Gold said billions in commerce at countless businesses nationwide could be affected, from auto manufacturers awaiting parts to the truckers that deliver them.
Here is the link
jacksonville.com...
With the fiscal cliff,the US debt limit about to be reached,and now this, it seems
That we are in for a rough ride.
Originally posted by Tardacus
I don`t see a problem, so what if people have to wait until the strike is over to buy that new toyota they have their eye on or the latest and greatest video game or cell phone?
Oh thats right, it will cut into corporate americas profits and therefore it`s a national emergency.
Originally posted by Wrabbit2000
Or... Look at this another way. In remembering the recent Hostess Bakery disaster where striking for a few bucks won the local Union 100% loss of every last job there was....(and 8500+ others they had no right to bargain with) in this example, the United States is the bakery and ..umm...Like the Teamsters themselves told the Hostess people ....it's not a bluff or game. The economy is in VERY BAD trouble ....and they seem like they want to HELP MAKE it worse.
Originally posted by mikell
But they are making a BILLION dollars a day I read yeaterday. They could fork over a bit of that and never miss a lick. I say shut them down. Nobody will be going without pay . They have strike pay and the trickle down have unemployment. A BILLION A DAY PROFIT!!
, a one-day strike would result in a three-tofour week delay. If a strike lasts longer than one day it will result in a six-to-eight week delay. The delay time for shipments will increase significantly by each day that a work stoppage continues
Originally posted by Tazkven
Originally posted by Wrabbit2000
Or... Look at this another way. In remembering the recent Hostess Bakery disaster where striking for a few bucks won the local Union 100% loss of every last job there was....(and 8500+ others they had no right to bargain with) in this example, the United States is the bakery and ..umm...Like the Teamsters themselves told the Hostess people ....it's not a bluff or game. The economy is in VERY BAD trouble ....and they seem like they want to HELP MAKE it worse.
Not buying it, the Bakers Union was asked for the third time in a row to take concessions in pay and benefits while executives kept giving themselves raises. How many times can you expect someone to get spit in the face before they actually stand up for themselves? The workers were not to blame for Hostess's downfall .. that is on management, regardless of the corporate spin, they are the ones that rode Hostess into the ground.
Regarding the OP, I have not researched the terms of the contract to fully understand where the negotiations are stalling but workers across this nation are battling corporate greed, as workers wages fall and corporate profits are at record highs.
I for one am glad to see and fully support workers taking a stand in the battle of wage equality.edit on 27-12-2012 by Tazkven because: (no reason given)
they are just following the leader ... Obama gives Congress and Fed employees a raise via executive order ... www.abovetopsecret.com...
next thing i know every exec gets a raise .
Originally posted by Tazkven
Not buying it, the Bakers Union was asked for the third time in a row to take concessions in pay and benefits while executives kept giving themselves raises. How many times can you expect someone to get spit in the face before they actually stand up for themselves? The workers were not to blame for Hostess's downfall .. that is on management, regardless of the corporate spin, they are the ones that rode Hostess into the ground.
The latest ILA-USMX contract extension expires at 11:59 p.m., Feb. 6. The union and employers have held a series of federally mediated bargaining sessions since agreeing to an extension last month that averted a threatened Dec. 30 strike.
Work rules at the high-cost Port of New York and New Jersey have been a top issue in this year’s negotiations. Employers want changes to decades-old provisions that require excess staffing and pay for workers who aren’t on the job. The ILA says the proposed changes go too far.
Both sides have said agreement on a Maine-to-Texas master contract hinges on settlement of supplemental local contracts led by the one covering New York-New Jersey.
If negotiators can’t agree on a contract or a third extension by Feb. 6, the ILA could strike, or a management could shut the ports by locking out union workers. Employers discussed a lockout before they and the union agreed to the current contract extension last month.