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February 14, 2015

Labor secretary pushing for West Coast ports deal

SAN FRANCISCO - Labor Secretary Tom Perez will travel to California to help broker an deal between shipping companies and dockworkers in a dispute that has partially shut down ports along the U.S. West Coast, the White House said on Saturday.

The Obama administration's move came after shippers vowed to prevent the loading and unloading of freight rom container ships at the 29 ports, barring a settlement in talks with the dockworkers' union.

The impact of the dispute has rippled through the U.S. commercial supply chain, delaying deliveries of a wide range of goods from agricultural produce to housewares and apparel.

"The negotiations over the functioning of the West Coast ports have been taking place for months with the administration urging the parties to resolve their differences," White House spokesman Eric Schultz said.

"Out of concern for the economic consequences of further delay, the president has directed his Secretary of Labor Tom Perez to travel to California to meet with the parties to urge them to resolve their dispute quickly at the bargaining table."

Perez has been in contact with the parties and will keep the president updated, he said.

Negotiators for the union representing 20,000 dockworkers at the ports and management's bargaining agent, the Pacific Maritime Association, agreed on Friday to a federal mediator's request for a 48-hour news blackout. The two sides held a bargaining session on Thursday, their first face-to-face meeting in nearly a week.

The association said the talks hit a snag over a demand by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union for changes in the system of binding arbitration in contract disputes.

According to Lee Peterson, a spokesman for the port of Long Beach, 32 freighters were waiting to dock at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, California by Saturday.

Shippers first suspended vessel operations at the ports for two days last weekend and then again on Thursday, a union holiday. On Friday, port operations resumed in full for one eight-hour shift before the loading and unloading of container ships was halted again.

The West Coast ports were not left entirely dormant. The companies said work continues in the dockyards, rail yards and terminal gates as they seek to clear some of the cargo containers already stacked up on the waterfronts.

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