Posted on 10/06/2024 6:18:54 PM PDT by Libloather
As East and Gulf Coast ports begin to operate as normal again, one of the country’s top entrepreneurs is weighing in on “the trouble” with union workers’ demands.
“The trouble with East Coast ports is they’re very old, they’re very inefficient,” O’Leary Ventures Chairman and “Shark Tank” star Kevin O’Leary said on “Varney & Co.” Friday.
“And when you start to compare them against other international ports like Singapore and the other Asian ports,” he continued, “we’re just not holding much up against them. And that’s very bad for productivity.”
US dockworkers returned to work Friday morning after reaching a tentative agreement with employers on an improved wage offer.
The International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA), which represents 45,000 striking workers, said the union and USMX have reached a “tentative agreement on wages and have agreed to extend the Master Contract until January 15, 2025 to return to the bargaining table to negotiate all other outstanding issues.”
FOX Business reported that workers accepted a 62% wage increase, effective immediately.
But the ILA’s tentative deal statement mentioned nothing about protection from technology and automation.
A Tuesday statement from the ILA said that it is “steadfastly against any form of automation – full or semi – that replaces jobs or historical work functions. We will not accept the loss of work and livelihood for our members due to automation.”
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
It’s hard almost impossible to stop progress. Remember when the computers were coming out and then early to mid 90s I would’ve never believed I would have a phone where I could do everything on it by plane tickets do all kinds of work. There’s so much progress that should have been stopped. Can’t think of an example now but it’s gonna be impossible for them to stop automation down the road I believe.
Building efficiencies into a system does reduce head count, however those union members who would be affected can be retrained for the jobs that support automation and the additional activities that automation will create. Work can be done faster which means more inter-modal transportation opportunities.
“There will be some new jobs with far higher wages.”
True that there will be jobs maintaining the automated handlers, but there will be fewer jobs for us humans, won’t there?
MHO - Making Humans Obsolete.
The protected labor unions like dock workers on both coasts and teachers and municipal workers , and steel workers, and the UAW have fueled inflation, harmed education, blown municipal budgets,and crippled industries everywhere. The Democrats want to extend protections even more.
In unprotected private sector manufacturing the unions are below 7% participation.
Copilot:
Sent by you:
average uaw wage line worker
Sent by Copilot:
The average wage for a United Auto Workers (UAW) line worker is around $28 per hour12. This can vary based on factors like tenure and the specific automaker. For example, top-tier workers, who joined before 2007, earn about $33 per hour2. Meanwhile, newer hires might start at lower rates, around $17 per hour2.
Is there something specific you were curious about regarding UAW workers?
The wage increase spread out over the dollar value shipped to ports is a rounding error at best.
Not really. Did any auto maker that offshored proction to get cheap 3rd world labor brag about retail price reduction because of same?
Yeah, I don't remember that either.
We will not accept the loss of work and livelihood for our members due to automation.”
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That statement is rephrasing of the zero-sum liberal economic theory. Every machine breaks down, parts wear out, etc - they all need a human operation/engineer to fix the problem, replace the part.
They would likely end up with more jobs than they have now.
If Kevin is such a genius he should know that foreign entities own most of our ports. The only Americans involved in this mess are the dock workers.
Automation is great but even that means remote operators, i.e., slave labor from India, etc
Don’t know where you got your figures but with the 2023 settlement the staring wage went up 70% to over $30/hr.
Pay for veteran workers at Detroit Three to rise by 33%
UAW won right to strike future plant closures
Contract will boost GM labor, pension costs $7 bln -sources: Reuters
It was the most the UAW got in decades.
None of the transplant plants from Europe and Asia have unions although VW lost a recent election and is appealing.
The 100% tariff on imported pickups is government protection for the market where the big three make their money.
This government protection is the only reason the 3 US car manufacturers are still in business, although the EV mandates will likely kill everyone but the Chinese.
PS: Co-Pilot is AI. The data is usually accurate.
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