Linkage
Sounds like the docworkers want to lose their jobs one way or another. If they run innefecient ports they will close anyway.
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The shippers want to modernize ports, which would eliminate hundreds of union jobs. The dockworkers want any jobs involving new technology to be under union control.
The Pacific Maritime Association, which represents shipping companies, offered to keep 100 percent health-care benefits if the dockworkers would cut a deal on the technology issues.
The International Longshore and Warehouse Union, which represents 10,500 dockworkers, rejected such a deal.
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In the Netherlands, unmanned vehicles move cargo containers around the port. Workers in Singapore run four cranes at a time by remote control. In New York and New Jersey, ports have computers and sensors to track cargo.
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At the Port of Oakland, marine clerks confirm deliveries with clipboards and some computers. They then obtain information about the cargoes from the truck drivers, instead of scanning a bar code like at many ports.
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"If you put all this technology together ... you can take a one-hour or one-and-a-half hour transaction down to 15 or 30 minutes," said Tom Ward
Sounds like the docworkers want to lose their jobs one way or another. If they run innefecient ports they will close anyway.
