ILWU History
ILWU Stands Up
Again Against Anti-Union Attacks
by Repost
Tuesday Sep 27th, 2011 12:58
PM Corporations
Try To Break the Unions at Washington and Oregon Ports.
ILWU Fights Back! Workers make a stand
By Jack Heyman
Longshore workers on the Columbia River caught everyone’s
attention three weeks ago when they blocked a move by a
multinational grain consortium that threatened their union and their
jobs. The media berated hundreds of
longshoremen “storming” the port of Longview , Wash., and
dumping thousands of tons of grain from railroad cars on the track.
Most
accounts glossed over that in opening its $200 million Export Grain
Terminal, St. Louis-based Bunge North America refused to abide by
the port’s contract to hire workers from the International
Longshore and Warehouse Union, Local 21.
Bunge threw down the gauntlet, then acted shocked when the ILWU resisted. More than 125 longshore workers and their supporters have been arrested, including ILWU International President Bob McEllrath. He was released after police were surrounded by some 500 angry longshoremen.
U.S. District Judge Ronald
Leighton complained because his anti-picket injunction has been
defied, saying he felt like a “paper tiger.” The Local 21 union hall proudly displays a banner, “Defend the
Picket Line, Defend Free Speech.” Why such a militant struggle to defend jobs?
At a time when poverty in America has reached the highest level in
50 years, maritime companies want to eliminate good paying union
jobs. Last year in Philadelphia, Del Monte Fresh Produce Co. went
nonunion, violating its agreement with the East Coast International
Longshoremen’s Association. Now Bunge wants to do the same on the
West Coast.
It’s a threat to all waterfront unions and all workers. Last February and March, labor supporters occupied the Wisconsin capitol and held marches of more than 100,000 to protest an attack on unions.
That electrified workers around
the country, but the action was derailed after it became a political
football for Democratic Party politicians. So now teachers and other
public workers in Wisconsin have no bargaining rights. ILWU pickets
proudly wear T-shirts reading “No Wisconsin Here.”
This scenario may change. A line has been drawn on the waterfront of
this country. Trying to disguise its union-busting as an inter-union
squabble, EGT hired Operating Engineers Local 701 to do the
longshore work.
That fiction won’t wash. Washington and Oregon state AFL-CIO’s
are supporting ILWU, as is the ILA, pledging “full support.”
Corporate arrogance could provoke a first-ever shut down of all U.S.
ports at once.
And Panama Canal pilots, who
recently joined the ILWU, as well as the International
Dockworkers’ Council and the International Transport Workers
Federation are also on board.
The American working class, like European workers protesting
anti-labor attacks, could awaken. EGT needs to ship the grain to the
global market to make its profit. But longshore workers and their
supporters aren’t backing down.
Just last week, Local 21 President Dan Coffman and a dozen “Women
of the Waterfront,” members and supporters of the longshore union
were arrested for sitting down on the railroad tracks in Longview.
As Shelly Porter, a young
longshore worker and mother of a young daughter who’s been
arrested three times (once at night in her home), put it, “We’ve
got no option. Either we defend our jobs or we have nothing.”
Longshoremen on both coasts couldn’t agree more.
Jack Heyman has worked 45 years in the maritime industry as a seaman
and as an Oakland longshoreman.