Dockworkers across the eastern United States are joining their peers on strike at Montreal ports as a fresh wave of labour action grips North American supply chains.
Workers at 36 U.S. ports from Maine to Texas took to the picket lines early Tuesday in a strike over wages and automation.
The contract between the ports and about 45,000 members of the International Longshoremen’s Association expired at midnight.
Workers at the Port of Philadelphia walked in a circle outside the port and chanted, “No work without a fair contract.” The union, striking for the first time since 1977, had message boards on the side of a truck reading, “Automation Hurts Families: ILA Stands For Job Protection.”
The U.S. Maritime Alliance, which represents the ports, said Monday evening that both sides had moved off of their previous wage offers. But no deal was reached.
Montreal’s dockworkers meanwhile began a 72-hour strike on Monday. That action shut down two terminals that handle some 40 per cent of container traffic at Canada’s second-largest port.
The union local, affiliated with the Canadian Union of Public Employees, says the pressure tactic aims to lend weight to demands around regular scheduling and higher wages.
On Sunday, the Maritime Employers Association (MEA) said it had tried “all possible means” of avoiding a strike, including in mediation and at an emergency hearing before the Canada Industrial Relations Board that afternoon.
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The White House released a statement Tuesday from U.S. President Joe Biden and Vice-President Kamala Harris saying the pair was “closely monitoring” the impact of the port strikes and urging the parties to come to an agreement at the table.
The statement added that Biden and Harris were were “assessing ways to address potential impacts, if necessary,” to the U.S. supply chain.
The pair of strikes land at a pivotal time with the U.S. presidential election weeks away and the broader North American economy slowing under the weight of higher interest rates.
Recent confidence that inflation has come back under control — a trend that’s led central banks on both sides of the border to kick off interest rate cuts — could be at risk amid the strikes.
A Moody’s analysis shared by the firm with Global News on Wednesday said a U.S. ports strike “lasting more than a week or two would result in rising prices and noticeable shortages of manufacturing inputs and retail goods.”
It said the automotive sector would struggle as inventories of imported components dwindle, and agricultural imports and exports would slow.
The Canadian Chamber of Commerce says $3.6 billion worth of goods and services cross the U.S.-Canada border every day. A large amount of imports come into Canada through the U.S. East Coast ports, which are able to handle far more capacity than the Port of Halifax and Port of Montreal, the main Canadian shipping points on the Atlantic.
A shutdown of those U.S. ports would threaten the delivery and viability of much of those goods, business groups say.
“There’s a lot of concern,” Pascal Chan, the Canadian Chamber of Commerce’s senior director of transportation, infrastructure and construction, told Global News.
“Any significant disruption can really jeopardize the livelihoods of workers across multiple industries on both sides of the border.”
Business groups are also eying a potential shutdown at ports in British Columbia, where dockworkers informed their employer early this month that they had approved their own strike mandate.
A strike by 7,400 B.C. dockworkers dragged on for 13 days in July 2023, shutting down the country’s biggest port and costing the economy billions of dollars.
Last October, an eight-day strike by employees on the locks of the St. Lawrence Seaway halted shipments of grain, iron ore and gasoline along the trade corridor.
And in Montreal, longshore workers went on strike for five days in April 2021 and in August 2020 in a 12-day job action that left 11,500 containers languishing on the waterfront.
— with files from Global News’s Sean Boynton, the Canadian Press and the Associated Press
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