<http://talkingunion.wordpress.com/2013/08/30/wave-of-low-wage-worker-strike
s-hits-la-ports/> Wave of Low-Wage Worker Strikes Hits LA Ports

Posted on August 30, 2013 by dsalaborblogmoderator 

By
<http://talkingunion.wordpress.com/2013/08/30/wave-of-low-wage-worker-strike
s-hits-la-ports/#micah> Micah Uetricht

 
<http://talkingunion.files.wordpress.com/2013/08/uetricht_port_truck_strikes
_la_green_fleet.jpg> Port truckers picketing Green Fleet Systems in Los
Angeles chased after strike-breaking trucks. ( International Brotherhood of
Teamsters Events/Flickr) 

Port truckers picketing Green Fleet Systems in Los Angeles chased after
strike-breaking trucks. ( International Brotherhood of Teamsters
Events/Flickr)

(August 28) Workers at the Ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles were probably
surprised yesterday to see groups of truckers chasing trucks making
deliveries and setting up temporary picket lines in front of them.

Port truck drivers went on a 24-hour strike early Monday evening to protest
alleged union-busting by Green Fleet, one of the port's biggest trucking
companies. The Green Fleet drivers say that the company harassed and
intimidated workers who were trying to organize with the Teamsters, and
hired a union-busting law firm to block unionization.

The strike is the latest salvo in an ongoing campaign to organize port
truckers, who say that despite playing a key role in the global supply chain
for some of the country's largest corporations, the trucks they drive amount
to "
<http://cleanandsafeports.org/blog/2011/12/12/an-open-letter-from-america%E2
%80%99s-port-truck-drivers-on-occupy-the-ports/> sweatshops on wheels." Many
drivers make poverty wages and complain of subhuman working conditions, like
being denied access to bathrooms.

Organizers say 30 of the about 80 full-time workers at Green Fleet, who move
merchandise for companies like Skechers and Huffy, walked out early Monday
evening and successfully returned to work Tuesday. The strike follows last
year's successful union drive for port truckers employed by Toll Group in
<http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/13035/toll_election_victory_union_tea
msters_los_angeles_australia_nlrb_union-bust/> Los Angeles and
<http://fryingpannews.org/2013/07/19/new-jersey-port-drivers-choose-union-re
presentation/> New Jersey, as well as a trucker strike in
<http://inthesetimes.com/article/12775/seattle_port_strike_challenges_indepe
ndent_contractor_lie/> Seattle.

It's also the latest use of the strike as a short-term, offensive tactic
against low-wage employers-a technique that seems to be spreading across the
country.

Domino effect

Mario Hernandez has driven trucks at the Port of Los Angeles for 15 years
and has worked for Green Fleet for four. He says he and his coworkers are
paid not by the hour, but by the load, meaning they never receive overtime
pay despite being forced to work overtime hours.

"I'm struggling. I can't even take my kids to the dentist," Hernandez says.
Adding his family onto his just health insurance plan-not including
dental-would have cost an additional $120 per week, "and I can't afford
that."

Hernandez has a friend working for Toll, whose successful union drive led to
a contract with employer-paid healthcare. "We do the same job;  we move the
same kinds of containers that they do," he says. "Why shouldn't we have the
same benefits?" Inspired by Toll workers' victory, Green Fleet workers began
organizing in January.

Second-class drivers

Hernandez is a full-time Green Fleet employee, but the company also
employees 35-40 independent contractors, according to the organizers, in Los
Angeles, who as "owner-operators" of their trucks receive no benefits and
are responsible for the cost of upkeep of their vehicles. The contractors
form a kind of hyper-exploited second-class workforce throughout the
trucking industry that owners use to keep wages low.

No independent contractors are on strike, as they cannot file unfair labor
practice charges, but organizers did say some of them did not show up to
work today. Independent contractors face even more abusive conditions than
full-time employees. In a 2011
<http://cleanandsafeports.org/blog/2011/12/12/an-open-letter-from-america%E2
%80%99s-port-truck-drivers-on-occupy-the-ports/> open letter from
independent contractor port truckers in multiple cities, drivers described
"keep[ing] empty bottles in our cabs" to urinate into, as some trucking
companies do not provide basic facilities for contractors, and numerous
costs for basic operation. "Everything comes out of our pockets or is
deducted from our paychecks," the letter reads. "The truck or lease, fuel,
insurance, registration, you name it."

Nick Weiner, campaign coordinator for the Change to Win federation (of which
the Teamsters are a member) ports campaign, says port drivers "sit on the
bottom of port economy." "Misclassification of full-time workers as
independent contractors is at the heart of the business model" of trucking
companies," Weiner says. Such misclassification is a
<http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/6122/> widespread practice across the
American economy that allows companies to avoid paying benefits and escape
some taxes.

"Misclassification is a scourge of this country," says Rabbi Jonathan Klein
of Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice (CLUE), a faith-based worker
rights organization in Los Angeles. "It hurts working people's ability to
have fair conditions on the job. In this case, it creates wage theft, and
allows them to be abused."

Klein is one of 10 religious leaders accompanying workers back to work
post-strike on Tuesday.

Ambulating to the win

Hernandez also says that after a group of workers delivered a petition to
management demanding recognition of the union, Green Fleet management never
responded; instead, they brought in a union busting law firm to intimidate
union supporters.

"Why is [management] paying them so much money to avoid a union rather than
sitting down with us to form our union?" Hernandez says.

Truckers walked off at 4:30 P.M. on Monday, and immediately began
"ambulatory picketing." Since truckers travel throughout the workday,
strikers follow "scab" trucks and picket them near their final destination.

According to organizers, one strikebreaking driver was attempting to make a
delivery when he noticed strikers were following him. He stopped, put on his
hazard lights, and jumped out of his cab to begin talking with the strikers
about their decision to walk off the job. He returned to his cab and wrote
the drivers a note in Spanish (pictured below), explaining he was too scared
of getting fired to join, but supported the strike.

http://inthesetimes.com/images/articles/GFS_driver_note.jpg

Workers were joined by religious leaders and local politicians, including
the mayor of the city of Carson, Calif., where the Port of Los Angeles is
located, and U.S. Rep.  Janice Hahn (D). One city council member, Mike
Gipson, spent much of the night with the workers, from midnight to 4:00 A.M.

On Tuesday, workers returning to work accompanied by community members were
initially turned away from the company's entrance. But after a half hour
outside the gates, the company eventually agreed to the workers' return to
work today-leading the union to declare victory.

A growing wave

The Los Angeles truckers are the latest low-wage, non-union workers to walk
off the job, engaging not in a traditional strike after an impasse in
bargaining but as an offensive measure, walking off over alleged
<http://www.labornotes.org/2012/08/making-sure-strike-centers-unfair-labor-p
ractices> unfair labor practices (ULPs) before becoming formal union
members-what Labor Notes' Jenny Brown calls a "
<http://www.labornotes.org/2013/01/walmart-and-fast-food-unions-scaling-stri
ke-first-strategy> strike first strategy."

Fast food and retail workers continue to make headlines for
<http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/15366/fast_food_slow_burn/> multiple
strikes since last fall, in an effort backed by the Service Employees
(SEIU). Beginning in October, Wal-Mart workers organizing with OUR Walmart,
affiliated with the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW),
<http://inthesetimes.com/article/13979/why_walmart_why_now/> walked out
<http://inthesetimes.com/article/14297/the_walmart_revolt/> several times.
Warehouse workers in a Chicago suburb
<http://www.labornotes.org/2012/10/strike-supporters-shut-down-illinois-walm
art-warehouse> struck in September, staying out on the picket line for weeks
and shutting down a key Wal-Mart distribution center for a day before
<http://www.labornotes.org/2012/10/walmart-warehouse-strikers-return-work-fu
ll-back-pay> winning most of their demands. Soon after, warehouse workers
struck in
<http://fryingpannews.org/2012/11/16/arrests-made-in-walmart-contracted-ware
house-strike/> Southern California.

Such strikes are quickly gaining traction across industries and various
unions, particularly within Change to Win (though since backing the Wal-Mart
workers' first strikes, the
<http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/15268/ufcw_expected_to_rejoin_afl_cio
_in_august/> UFCW has returned to the AFL-CIO). As I wrote earlier this year
for
<http://www.dissentmagazine.org/online_articles/low-wage-workers-strike-beca
use-yolo> Dissent, even though these walkoffs do not always significantly
hurt companies' profits-the key power of the strike, according to Joe
Burns's  <http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/7342/> recent book on the
subject-they do serve to legitimate the act of striking to wring concessions
out of employers at a time when strikes are at an
<http://mattbruenig.com/datasets/labor-strikes/> all-time low. Tentatively,
more unions and more workers seem comfortable with taking militant action on
the job.

Victory breeds victory

The port truckers returned to work Tuesday afternoon, accompanied by
community and religious leaders to protect them from retaliation, as many
fast food and retail strikers have done in the past. Organizers say the
24-hour walkoff is just the beginning of the Green Fleet campaign, and that
further battles with other nonunion port trucking companies are also likely.

Gonzalez says he is sure other drivers will support future strikes if this
one brings gains, as he was galvanized when he saw the unionized Toll
drivers win union recognition and a contract.

"Once they see us back at work, they'll lose their fear," he says.

Micah Uetricht is an assistant editor at Jacobin and a contributing editor
for In These Times who has written for The Nation,Al Jazeera America, and
elsewhere. His book Strike for America: Chicago Teachers Against Austerity
will be published later this year by Verso/Jacobin Books.. Follow him on
Twitter  <http://twitter.com/micahuetricht> @micahuetricht.  This post
originally appeared on the  <http://inthesetimes.com/working/> Working In
These Times blog.

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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