Truckers could stay home from nation's biggest port complex
By Associated Press
Apr 27, 2015 2:13 AM CDT

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Truck drivers who haul goods from the nation's busiest port complex in Los Angeles and Long Beach could stay home Monday in a long-running labor dispute.

The results of a weekend vote from Teamsters are set to be revealed and could lead to a partial work stoppage at the ports, officials said.

About 16,000 drivers work at the ports, most of them independent contractors for trucking companies. The truckers say they face shrinking wages and want to become employees of the trucking companies, which they say would mean better wages and workplace protections.

It was too soon to say what, if any, effect a work stoppage would have on business, said ports representatives.

Earlier this year, tough contract negotiations with dockworkers nearly closed 29 seaports from San Diego to Seattle, causing major delays in the delivery of billions of dollars of imports and exports.

The drivers have been subjected to "persistent wage theft," said Teamsters spokeswoman Barb Maynard.

Trucking companies have argued that driver pay is good and picketing at the ports did not represent the majority of drivers.

They object especially to the timing of the unrest as the port is still recovering from a dockworkers strike.

"I believe now is a horrible time to introduce any slow-downs to the supply chain," Weston LaBar, executive director of the Harbor Trucking Association, said in a statement late last week. "If they want to be a part of the real solution perhaps they should suspend these efforts until we get closer to a normal flow of cargo in the San Pedro Bay. We don't want to put any more jobs in our region in jeopardy."

The Southern California ports are the primary West Coast gateway for hundreds of billions of dollars of annual trade with Asia.