SEATTLE PORT STRIKE CHALLENGES "INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR" LIE
Truck drivers in the Puget Sound shut down ports for two weeks-and 
begin to shift the balance of power.
By David Bacon
In These Times, Website edition, 2/21/12
http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/12775/seattle_port_strike_challenges_independent_contractor_lie



Abdulkader Ali asks a driver to join the strike.

SEATTLE-Employers say they're "independent contractors." Drivers call 
that a legal trick to deny them their rights-a nice-sounding label 
obscuring an ugly reality.

For two weeks in February, this argument raged at terminal gates in 
the ports of Seattle and Tacoma. Hundreds of truckers, who normally 
ferry huge shipping containers from dockside to waiting trains and 
warehouses, refused to get behind the wheel and drive. Instead, they 
caravanned to the terminal gates and appealed to their coworkers to 
climb out of their cabs and join their strike.

Port managers claimed that it was business as usual on the docks. 
Standing in front of the BNSF rail yard, though, the strikers could 
see stacks of containers that weren't going anywhere. When they 
wouldn't drive, the "cans," as they're called, stacked up on ships, 
in rail yards, and at warehouses. The port's lifeblood slowed to a 
crawl. Cargo has to move for shippers and trucking companies to make 
money. A still container, a waiting ship and an idle truck all mean 
lost profits. It was clear the strike was costing employers a lot of 
money.

Finally, after the standoff had gone on for two weeks, on February 14 
the two sides basically declared a truce, and drivers went back to 
work. In their eyes, however, it was only a step, not yet an 
agreement that resolved their problems. They had made their point, 
however, by showing the trucking companies they work for-and the huge 
shipping corporations behind them-that drivers have power over the 
movement of cargo. And they could and would use it to bring about the 
changes they demanded.

The truckers came away from the strike better organized than they'd 
ever been before. Every morning they'd gather at the Teamsters Union 
hall in Tukwila before heading to the docks. Then, in the evening 
they'd return. The hall would fill with drivers in intense 
conversations in Amharic, Somali, Urdu and English as they repeated 
their demands and decided on tactics for the following day. After two 
weeks, a hardened core of 400 were veterans of the flying squads, 
deployed in winter rainstorms from gate to gate. They had testified 
in hearings and spoken to reporters.

In the end, many agreed their most important achievement was the 
organization that emerged strengthened from the strike: the Seattle 
Port Truckers Association.


One driver signals his support for the strike.

Ultimately, the drivers want a change in their status, as does the 
union helping them, the Teamsters. "We want to be considered 
employees," said striker Burhan Abdi, by which he meant that the 
companies should assume real responsibility for the conditions they 
impose.

While the containers with the cargo and the trailers that carry them 
belong to the shipping companies, the tractors-that is, the engines 
and cabs that pull the trailers-belong to the drivers. In theory. In 
reality, ownership is a not-so-polite fiction.

To drive for the trucking companies, the workers have to lease them 
their trucks. "But when I need to use the truck for some other 
purpose, it's not mine," explained Abdi. "It's the company's. It 
looks like I own it, but that's not real. It's my truck but it's not 
my truck." Abdi said that if he even used it to move his family's 
furniture to a new apartment, the company would fire him for it.

That's just one reason truckers refused to haul loads for two weeks. 
Since the deregulation of the trucking industry in the 1970s, the 
fiction of ownership has been the lever the companies use to dictate 
conditions and prevent bargaining over them. Trucking companies pay a 
set amount for each load a driver hauls-usually between $40 and $48. 
Out of that, drivers have to pay all the costs of running their 
rigs-the gas, the repairs and maintenance. The trucking companies in 
turn get paid by the huge corporations that own the ships, railroads, 
container cranes and terminals.

Drivers often have to wait in long lines to pick up a load. Dozens of 
cabs and empty trailers stand with their big diesels running. The air 
turns thick and acrid from their blue smoke. In the distance, huge 
ships are pulled up next to the docks, containers stacked so high on 
their decks they seem like tall buildings. Enormous cranes stack and 
unstack the cans, moving them like toys from dock to ship and back.

One driver described his life: "In order to get a load, you have to 
get up early, at four o'clock in the morning. You pull yourself up 
into the cab of your truck while you're still half-awake - you don't 
even see your family before you leave. Then you go down to the harbor 
and get into the lines. And you wait. Finally, you get to the head of 
the line, and you get a container. Then you're on the freeway, making 
time as fast as you can, to deliver it to the customer. When you get 
there, you usually have to wait to unload as well, before you go back 
down to the harbor for another pick up. No one pays you for all those 
hours of waiting."

"When we stay at a terminal we don't get paid," said another driver, 
Michael Kidane, who drives for Pacer Cartage. "When we haul heavy 
loads or reefers (refrigerated containers), we don't get paid for 
that. When we return a chassis, we don't get paid. The company gets 
paid for all this, but we don't."

Often the trailers are in poor condition, and drivers can be cited if 
their brakes don't work properly. Cans are stuffed so full they weigh 
more than the legal limits. Starbucks, for instance, according to 
drivers, is well known for overweight containers. If they take on the 
load and later are stopped by the Highway Patrol, they're fined for 
excessive weight. Drivers, not companies, have to pay the fines, and 
if they get too many tickets, they can lose their licenses. But if 
they refuse the loads, the employers will punish them by denying them 
work for a few days.

One of the strike's demands, Kidane noted, was that companies should 
give them copies of the cargo manifests for the containers. They show 
how much the cans weigh, and even more important, how much the 
companies get for hauling them. Unsurprisingly, this was a demand the 
trucking firms resisted strongly.

'Babies' and 'monkeys'

Companies charge drivers $120 a week for liability insurance, even 
though the freight is already insured by the shippers. Sometimes a 
driver gets sick or there's not enough work, and the rig sits idle. 
Then drivers get the symbol they detest the most, that more than any 
other inspired their strike: the negative paycheck. Their employers 
hand them a check with a $120 charge they'll deduct from future 
earnings, for a week when the truck never moved. Drivers doubt that 
the companies actually spend that $120 on insurance, and instead 
believe they pocket most of it.



Burhan Abdi hold one of the notorious negative paychecks.

"They are making $120 each week, $480 per month, times 50 trucks," 
calculated striker Jaswinder Singh about his own employer. "There 
they're ripping off our money. They are robbing us, robbing us."

Sometimes, drivers said, the companies let them know their position 
in graphic language. According to Kidane, when truckers ask about the 
weight of their loads at his company, the dispatcher calls them 
babies. "I'm 37 years old, and she calls me a baby," he fumed. "One 
of my coworkers is over 50, and he's a baby too. A baby cannot drive 
a truck. A baby cannot get a license. I should get an award or 
something, instead of being called a baby."

In another company, drivers heard themselves referred to on the radio 
as monkeys. "There are white drivers, black drivers, Indians, 
Chinese, and Africans. They call all of us a bunch of monkeys," said 
Abdulkadir Ali, as he held aloft a sign saying "Respect Drivers' 
Rights!"

In every Pacific coast port, most drivers are immigrants. Seattle and 
Tacoma's truckers are mostly East African, from Ethiopia, Eritrea, 
Somalia and Kenya, along with Sikhs from the Punjab region of India. 
As immigrants, drivers often feel vulnerable. Abdi explained that 
they have to learn quickly to confront racism in the U.S. in a way 
they didn't have to in Africa.

"We are mostly immigrants and mostly blacks," he said. "I come from 
Somalia. Nobody even knows the word discrimination back there. But 
over here, I see discrimination when something wrong is happening. 
And everything wrong is happening in the Port of Seattle. We may come 
from countries far away, but we still have rights."

About 100 Sikhs, who make up 10 percent of the workforce, met at 
their local church to talk about whether or not to join the strike. 
"We understand," Jaswinder Singh recounted, "and we are not scared." 
The Sikh's memory of their own history, he explained, helped them 
understand the issues in their conflict with the companies. "We come 
from India, and we fought there against the British and kicked them 
out. We are fighting for the same thing here-integrity and simple 
respect and fairness. We believe in democracy, and we will fight 
peacefully, the right way. But we will fight to the last breath."



Jaswinder Singh talks with drivers in the hall after a day striking 
at the terminals.

The federal government says harbor truckers, and millions of workers 
like them, cannot join a union. They may look, think, talk and work 
like workers, but the government tells them they are not workers at 
all-they are "independent contractors."

That status is a product of the deregulation of the trucking 
industry. In 1973, the federal government began pulling apart the web 
of rules that had set prices for transporting goods from one point to 
another, and had provided minimum safety standards for drivers. That 
process was completed when President Carter signed the Motor Carrier 
Act of 1980. In the following era of cutthroat competition, trucking 
companies cut their costs to the bone. The most common method used to 
pare expenses was getting rid of drivers. Company after company laid 
off men and women who had been employees for years. Then they offered 
to pay a driver with his or her own truck a set amount of money to 
carry a load.

Old-timers remember that the companies had big lots full of used 
trucks, and sold them to the same people who'd been their employees. 
Once drivers got loans and bought rigs, though, they drove for the 
bank. From then on, all the expenses were theirs-gas, insurance, loan 
payment, repairs-everything.

Federal deregulation of the trucking industry essentially put drivers 
on a piece rate. For the companies, it was a good deal-they could pay 
by the load without assuming any of the risks. They no longer had to 
pay workers compensation, disability or unemployment insurance 
premiums for the drivers. If taxes or the price of gas went up, 
drivers had to absorb it. If a truck broke down, it wasn't the 
company's concern.

Freed of these costs, company profits went up. But truckers say as a 
result, their income dropped. Median income for Seattle drivers is 
now $28,500 per year, for an average workweek of 60 hours, but 
strikers on the picket line said they make as little as $15-20,000. 
Meanwhile, a union hourly wage in the trucking industry can reach 
$60,000 annually.



Striker Siefe Biru holds up a sign in Amharic, spoken by Ethiopians, 
urging drivers to join the strike.

West coast preludes

Long before the strike in Seattle, drivers tried to change 
conditions, especially in North America's largest port, Los 
Angeles/Long Beach. In the summer and fall of 1984, drivers unhappy 
over declining conditions spontaneously struck and shut down the 
harbor. In the strike's aftermath, they tried to set up a 
cooperative, but it failed. After trucking companies refused to 
improve conditions, drivers struck again in 1988 for six weeks. 
Rising gas prices led to a national wildcat movement in 1993, as 
owner-operators refused to pick up loads until trucking companies 
absorbed part of the increased cost.

On Terminal Island, between San Pedro and Long Beach harbors, police 
drove strikers from their lines with tear gas and rubber bullets, and 
forced them back to work. In January 1994, Los Angeles port drivers 
organized the Latin American Truckers Association, and in 1996 they 
struck for two weeks with the Communication Workers union. They lost 
that one as well.

Over the last decade, the Teamsters union, environmentalists and 
drivers in many ports organized the Coalition for Clean and Safe 
Ports. Near the Seattle port, in the immediate adjacent neighborhoods 
of South Park and Georgetown, the EPA has found that cancer risk is 
27 times higher than the national average. An estimated 95 percent of 
the nation's 110,000 port trucks fail to meet current U.S. EPA 
emission standards. To reduce the health dangers of the smoke from 
the long lines of waiting trucks to workers and residents, the 
coalition has proposed local ordinances. They would make the drivers 
direct employees of the companies they work for, and set up a 
dispatch system that wouldn't require them to wait so long in line 
for loads.

The trucking companies have challenged all the ordinances and legal 
battles continue over them. In January in Washington State, the 
legislature debated a bill that would hold the companies responsible 
for overweight loads or unsafe trailers, and another that would 
reinstate the employee status of port truckers. The Washington 
Trucking Association and the Washington Public Ports Association 
testified against them both.

The beginning of a new balance of power

When one came up for debate on January 30, however, more than 100 
drivers took off work and showed up in Olympia (the capital) to 
support it. Many of those who testified were threatened. After one 
driver, Yared Maconnen, was fired at Western Ports Transportation, 
the other drivers in his company walked off the job. The strike soon 
spread to other companies. Work stopped at major outfits like Seattle 
Freight Service Inc., Pacer Cartage, Western Ports Transportation 
Inc., Edgmon Trucking, Elliott Bay Service Transfer and PCC 
Logistics. As the strike progressed through demonstrations at the 
terminal gates and in meetings at the Teamsters Hall in Tukwila, it 
gave real power to the Seattle Port Truckers Association.

On February 13, drivers and supporters mounted a big rally in the 
Seattle port. With the help of Local 19 of the International 
Longshore and Warehouse Union-the workers who run the cranes and load 
and unload the ships-the drivers met with the port director and 
representatives of the trucking companies. The following day they 
agreed to continue talking, a de facto recognition of the power of 
the truckers' organization, and drivers went back to work.

As they climbed back into their cabs, some companies offered to 
increase the price per load by $4 if drivers have to wait more than 
an hour in line, and to pay for some trips taken without loads. Most 
of the original demands of the strike are still unresolved, but the 
balance of power in the port is shifting. Drivers who strike once can 
obviously do so again.

A similar shift may also be taking place in the tactics of the 
Teamsters union itself. The effort to win local and state ordinances 
requiring the companies to restore employee status will undoubtedly 
continue. But legislative efforts may now be combined with direct 
pressure in the terminals themselves, by drivers who undertake their 
own independent action to force immediate changes in conditions.

Seattle and Tacoma are no backwaters. Together they make up the third 
larges container port in North America, moving 1,700,000 cans a year. 
What happens on these Northwest docks will be felt in other ports as 
well, especially if drivers there adopt a similar strategy.

Whether in Seattle, Oakland or Los Angeles, the drivers' problems are 
the same. And the companies they "contract" for are too.

"We are considered like containers, thrown out after we're used," 
Kidane declared bitterly. "But I'm a human being, and I want them to 
see me and treat me like a human being."



Striker Michael Kidane.


For more articles and images, see  http://dbacon.igc.org

See also Illegal People -- How Globalization Creates Migration and 
Criminalizes Immigrants  (Beacon Press, 2008)
Recipient: C.L.R. James Award, best book of 2007-2008
http://www.beacon.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=2002

See also the photodocumentary on indigenous migration to the US
Communities Without Borders (Cornell University/ILR Press, 2006)
http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/cup_detail.taf?ti_id=4575

See also The Children of NAFTA, Labor Wars on the U.S./Mexico Border 
(University of California, 2004)
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9989.html
-- 
__________________________________

David Bacon, Photographs and Stories
http://dbacon.igc.org

__________________________________

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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