Similar efforts, along with intentional labor shortages, have continued into the first month of 2015. For example, yesterday, the ILWU ordered a 12-hour work stoppage commencing at 7:00 a.m. Today, ILWU members worked during the morning, but walked off the job without notice at 1:15 p.m. Work stoppages like this cause serious hardship to truckers, shippers, and the general public.
Productivity at Terminal 6 continues to fall well below acceptable historical levels. In May 2012, prior to the labor dispute which arose in June 2012, ILWU labor was producing approximately 24.8 moves per hour. However, in the last quarter of 2014, ILWU labor was producing at only approximately 13.2 moves per hour—a roughly 47% reduction. This level of production is far below industry as well as Terminal 6 standards.
Terminal 6 is the only international shipping container terminal in Oregon. As such, it is a powerful economic engine to the region that offers significant benefits to thousands of businesses, workers and consumers. For this reason, the ILWU’s deliberate and continuous work delays since June 2012 threaten the terminal’s future viability as a critical hub of regional economic activity. For the sake of the state’s long-term economic well-being, ICTSI Oregon, Inc. strongly encourages the ILWU to end its work stoppages,
slowdowns and labor shortages, and increase port productivity to historical levels.
ICTSI Oregon Inc. is a subsidiary of ICTSI, an international operator of common-user container terminals serving the global container shipping industry. ICTSI is the largest port operator in the Philippines and has a portfolio of 29 container terminal operations in 21 countries across six continents.