New York TIMES / September 8, 2011
Union Dispute Near Seattle Turns Violent and Idles Ports
By STEVEN GREENHOUSE

The busy ports of Seattle and Tacoma, Wash., were shut down on
Thursday as an increasingly violent dispute between unionized port
workers and the owner of a grain export terminal in Longview, Wash.,
spilled over to the other facilities.

About 500 longshoremen stormed the new $200 million terminal in
Longview before sunrise Thursday, carrying baseball bats, smashing
windows, damaging rail cars and dumping tons of grain from the cars,
police and company officials said.

Later in the day, more than 1,000 other longshoremen shut down the
ports of Seattle and Tacoma by not coming to work.

Officials with the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, while
claiming they had not authorized the actions in Seattle and Tacoma,
said the ports would reopen on Friday.

Members of the union are livid that the Longview terminal’s owner,
EGT, is seeking to export grain without reaching an agreement with the
union. Instead, EGT hired a contractor that uses workers from another
union

“It’s certainly getting more and more violent,” said Jim Duscha,
police chief of Longview, a small community almost 40 miles down the
Columbia River from Vancouver, Wash. “The terminal’s security guards
were outnumbered by people with baseball bats. People were busting
windows out of the guard shack. They took a security guard out of his
rig and drove it into a ditch.”

The violence was condemned by EGT, which is a joint venture of Bunge,
based in St. Louis; Itochu International of Japan; and STX Pan Ocean
of South Korea.

“Today, the I.L.W.U. took its criminal activity against EGT to an
appalling level, including engaging in assault and significant
property destruction,” Larry Clarke, EGT’s chief executive, said
Thursday. The longshoremen’s actions were a rare show of union
militancy, reminiscent of labor actions a century ago. The West Coast
longshoremen’s union asserted that it neither called for nor organized
the actions.

“It’s a wildcat and it’s unsanctioned,” said Craig Merrilees, the
union’s chief spokesman. “Workers did not show up to work today at the
ports of Tacoma and Seattle. Piecing things together, it appears that
folks voted with their feet and stood by their conscience to send a
message and express concern about what’s happened in Longview.”

If the union did coordinate the actions by the workers, it could be
found in contempt of a temporary restraining order issued last week
that prohibits the Longview union local from blocking entrances to the
EGT terminal.

On Thursday afternoon, Judge Ronald Leighton of United States District
Court in Tacoma held a hearing in which he expanded the restraining
order to cover other longshoremen’s locals in Washington State. He
also turned the temporary order into a preliminary injunction.

Judge Leighton had issued the original restraining order at the
request of the National Labor Relations Board, which said that the
longshoremen’s union was engaged in unfair labor practices and
improperly harassing workers at the EGT terminal.

Judge Leighton told the union’s lawyers on Thursday that there was a
peaceful way to protest. “It requires some restraint,” he said. “Your
clients have none of that.”

“They have to obey local laws,” he added. “They must restrain
themselves from violence, threats, vandalism and the like."

The judge scheduled another hearing for Thursday to determine whether
the longshoremen should be held in civil contempt for violating the
court’s temporary restraining order.

Officials at the Tacoma and Seattle ports confirmed that they were
closed on Thursday, delaying huge shipments, because the longshoremen
did not show up.

The train that was damaged in Thursday morning’s violence arrived at
the terminal on Wednesday night after police arrested 19 protesters
who tried to block the tracks.

In the union’s view, EGT is violating a longstanding agreement with
the Port of Longview that the union says requires companies leasing
facilities there to negotiate a labor agreement with the
longshoremen’s union.

Matthew Beck, an EGT spokesman, said that the company had sought to
negotiate an agreement, but that the union’s pension demands were too
expensive.

Isolde Raftery contributed reporting from Tacoma, Wash.


-- 
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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