Some 45,000 dockworkers at East and Gulf coast ports are returning to work after their union reached a deal to suspend a strike that could have caused shortages and higher prices if it had dragged on.
It is a grand thing that the International Longshoremen’s Association and its unionized workers have suspended the strike on East Coast ports. The ILA has decided to allow more time ...
Cooler heads prevailed, so the port strike is suspended, but President Joe Biden was dead wrong to refuse to invoke the Taft-Hartley Act to avert the crisis.
The International Longshoremen’s Association is suspending its three-day strike until Jan. 15 to provide time to negotiate a ...
This week on The Florida Roundup, we discuss recovery efforts a week after Hurricane Helene's landfall, all the ways to vote ...
Tens of thousands of longshoremen working at the ports on the East Coast returned to work on Friday after they reached a ...
A logistics expert weighs in on automation as ports reopen after International Longshoremen's Association strike ...
Never miss an episode. Follow The Big Take daily podcast today.Most Read from BloombergWhat Do US Vehicle Regulators Have ...
Shipping companies refused and worries mounted that the strike could drag on for weeks, creating gridlock at the ports, and recreating some of the pandemic-era supply chain snarls. But dockworkers and ...
Vice President Kamala Harris dodged a significant problem this week after the Biden administration helped negotiate a deal that delayed the historic United States port strike until after the 2024 ...
The dockworkers’ strike recently came to an end with a temporary deal in place until January, when the International Longshoremen’s Association will renegotiate with the U.S. Maritime Alliance.
When the history books are written about the fate of longshoremen in the US, few characters will loom as large as Harold ...