As we enter 2011, the Dispatcher takes a look back at some of the accomplishments and struggles that ILWU members faced in 2010.
Breaking the lockout in Boron
One of the largest mining companies in the world – Rio Tinto – tried to take out ILWU Local 30 members last year in Boron, CA but the company folded in the face of an impressive show of solidarity at home and abroad. Rio Tinto had reason to be confident after forcing nasty concessions on other union miners in the U.S. and around the world. The 570 families in Boron won their 15-week struggle thanks to support from the ILWU family, labor unions in Southern California and solidarity from union members around the world. Small businesses, neighbors and church leaders provided vital support at home in the high-desert communities. Local 30 members won a six-year agreement that phased-out a defined benefit pension plan but preserved essential rights on the job along with guaranteed raises and a $5,000 bonus.
“Local 30 members deserve the credit for sticking together and fighting for the best agreement we could get from a company that wanted to destroy our union, explained Local 30 President Dave Liebengood. “We didn’t get everything we wanted, and we had to make some compromises, but most workers felt that the final contract was a real victory for us.”
The agreement with Rio Tinto was reached with help from ILWU International President Bob McEllrath, Vice President Ray Familathe, and Secretary Treasurer Willie Adams. Local 30 President Dave Liebengood and the rank and file Negotiating Committee asked the ILWU International officers to assist them during the final week of intensive negotiations.
The victory against Rio Tinto could not have happened without the support from labor unions in Southern California who donated more than $50,000 in food to help families survive. Other money – more than $100,000 – was raised by ILWU Locals, the International, and other union groups to help Local 30 members keep their health insurance, pay mortgages, rent, car payments and utility bills.
Member Kim Evans expressed the views of many: “When we first got locked out I thought there was no way in heck we would win this. But we had so many people that showed up out here. I grew up out here, but for other people it’s a shock to see our little tiny desert town that looks like it would blow away. The Teamster trucks brought us $30,000 worth of groceries and then another $20,000, so we had a food bank.”
Besides paying for many of the groceries, members of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union (UFCW) in Southern California also delivered hundreds of Easter Baskets to families. Members at UFCW Local 8 in Sacramento donated 3,500 pounds of chicken. Members of ILWU Local 17 in Sacramento collected enough donations to buy and deliver 2,000 pounds of rice.
Darrell Nichols was typical of many Local 30 members who stepped up and took on new responsibilities during the lockout. Before it was over, he had served on the Contract Action Team (CAT), as a Gate Captain, and a member of the Emergency Support Committee that allocated funds to families in financial distress. And that’s all in addition to his duties as a local pastor.
“The support we got here in our community and from around the world was unbelievable,” said Nichols. It’s just amazing when you come from a little town like we do. It was really mind blowing to see all the unions donating food and money to help our families because it showed everyone that people really do care about each other. I learned that if you stick together and you have a common goal, you’ll come out OK,” said Nichols. “I’ve seen our union fall apart before, but this time we stuck together, and we did it.
The David vs. Goliath story is told in the new documentary by filmmaker Joan Sekler: “Locked Out – The Story of the Boron Miners’ Struggle.” The film debuted in Boron to an audience of Local 30 families and neighbors in December. The film will also be shown on Wednesday, February 16th at the Warner Grand Theater in San Pedro at an event sponsored by Locals 13, 63 and 94. Contact the locals for more information. DVD copies of the film can be purchased from the filmmaker at http://www.lockedout2010.org
Coast Committee stands with Latin American dockworkers
In 2010, the Coast Longshore Division increased its solidarity efforts and support of dockworkers in Latin America. These workers have faced assaults from governments and corporate forces who – with the support of the United States government – seek to destroy the dockworkers’ unions and rollback social gains they have won. The Coast Committee stood firmly behind dockworkers in Costa Rica and Peru who are facing fierce attacks from their governments and corporate forces who are trying to privatize ports at the expense of workers’ wages, health and safety.
The Coast Committee took actions in support of dockworkers in the Costa Rican ports of Limón and Moín after the democratically elected leadership of their union, SINTRAJAP, was illegally ousted by the Costa Rican government and replaced by a employer-run board of union directors. The sham union board then quickly signed a privatization agreement in exchange for a $137 million buyout in the name of a World Bank-funded project to promote “port reform.”
The Coast Committee publicized the plight of the Costa Rican dockworkers and filed a petition with the U.S. Department of Labor under the Dominican Republic-Central American Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) for “serious and repeated failures by the government of Costa Rica to enforce its own labor laws” and for illegally ousting the leadership of SINTRAJAP. The petition asked the US Government to invoke the labor provision in DR-CAFTA requiring the Costa Rican government to remedy the violations of international and domestic labor laws.