Retailers to Obama: Bring ILWU, PMA to Washington

Posted by Michelle Howard
Friday, February 20, 2015

The National Retail Federation issued the following statement from Vice President for Supply Chain and Customs Policy Jonathan Gold on the ongoing West Coast port contract negotiations between the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) and Pacific Maritime Association (PMA):


“It has been nearly a week since President Obama dispatched Labor Secretary Perez to the West Coast to help settle the protracted contract dispute between the ILWU and PMA. While the Secretary has said the meetings have been productive, we have yet to see a final deal.

“We understand the Secretary has given the parties a deadline to reach an agreement. If a deal is not reached today, we support the decision to move the negotiations to Washington and we call upon the president to personally engage in the discussions until an agreement is reached.


“The nation’s retailers and supply chain stakeholders cannot afford another week of uncertainty at the Pacific ports, where dozens upon dozens of ships and thousands of containers are held out at sea, and where hundreds of millions of dollars in consumer goods, inventory and merchandise sit idle.


“It is inconceivable that the parties are knowingly and willfully allowing the economy to be held hostage over a particular grievance, individual or issue. While the two sides debate a new contract, millions of American businesses and employers, large and small, and their employees are put at risk due to the impasse.


“The ILWU and PMA need to reach a final agreement today.”

 

Categories: Container Ships Contracts Finance Logistics People & Company News Ports

Related Stories

Ukrainian Drones Hit Tuapse Port Again, Environmental Crisis Deepens

Two New Post-Panamax Cranes Arrive at Port Tampa Bay

Wittlin Named CEO of GLO Marine

Current News

Mercuria Sues Baltic Exchange Over Freight Losses from Hormuz Closure

Ukrainian Drones Hit Tuapse Port Again, Environmental Crisis Deepens

Russian Attack Hits Port Infrastructure

Port Snared in US-China Dispute, says Panama President

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News