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United States East Coast, Gulf Coast port employees union to resume contract talks in November

The union representing 45,000 East Coast and Gulf Coast dockworkers and a group representing employers will resume negotiations next month toward reaching a. new sixyear contract ahead of a Jan. 15 deadline, they said on. Friday.

The International Longshoremen's Association union accepted. end a three-day strike on Oct. 3 after it won contract for a. 62% wage trek over 6 years with the United States Maritime. Alliance company group after considerable participation by the. White House and other Biden administration officials.

The work interruption was the very first large-scale strike at East. and Gulf coast ports in almost 50 years, briefly halting the. circulation of about half the country's ocean shipping.

The negotiating committees will meet in New Jersey next. month, both sides said in a joint statement, intending to agree on. terms that can be presented to workers for approval.

They collectively said they want to get a brand-new agreement in location. as quickly as possible but would not talk about any issues prior to. resumption of the settlements.

The crucial outstanding concern remains making use of automation at. the ports, authorities informed Reuters. The Biden administration is. worried about the possibility of a brand-new work blockage next year, a. senior official said.

The union previously demanded the company group stop port. automation jobs that it states threaten jobs.

The tentative deal announced earlier this month would raise. typical earnings to about $63 an hour from $39 an hour over the. life of the agreement. That is contingent on the rest of the. problems being fixed.

The union had actually been seeking a 77% raise, while the employer. group had actually previously raised its deal to an almost 50% hike.

(source: Reuters)