News

52° F Few Clouds

Central Oregon Forecast

Articles Restaurants Web Newsprint Archive 1907 — 1994

Longshoremen plan river protest

By The Associated Press
Published: October 07. 2012 4:00AM PST

PORTLAND — Longshoremen plan to take to the water if northwest grain terminal owners decide to lock them out of their jobs, a U.S. Coast Guard official says.

Capt. Bruce Jones, commanding officer for Oregon and southern Washington, told The Oregonian that his agency has been meeting with representatives from the International Longshore and Warehouse Union. The longshoremen said they intend to protest in boats on the Columbia and Willamette rivers if a lockout occurs.

“They told us that at this time if it does become a protest, they do intend to have boats on the water," Jones said. “They assured us they would not use their vessels to try to blockade the channel."

The union contract between longshoremen and the companies that operate six grain terminals in the Pacific Northwest expired Sept. 30, but the sides agreed to extend talks into mid-October. There’s no indication that negotiations will fail, but Coast Guard officials have been talking with union leaders and others along the rivers to lay plans in case they do.

Jones said managers of a security company that would be hired by terminals in the event of a lockout told the Coast Guard they are considering hiring some patrolmen in boats. Security boatmen, however, would have no enforcement authority on the water, where the Coast Guard and sheriffs’ departments have jurisdiction.

Jones said Coast Guard officials will continue talking with the longshore union, terminal managers and others.

View The Bulletin's commenting policy »

comments powered by Disqus
The Bulletin