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From the September-October
2009 issue of Union Democracy Review #181
A formidable force for reform in the ILA
The International Longshoremen's Association
is definitely evolving, but into what? This is one of the four unions
that, over the years, had been cited in government investigatory reports
as most heavily infiltrated by organized crime: the scene of payoffs and
murder so graphically portrayed in On
the Waterfront. It is still the object of a stalled federal RICO suit.
But things are happening that could never have happened before. For one
thing: Harold Daggett, the union's executive vice president, says that,
at the 2011 ILA convention, he will run against Richard Hughes, the incumbent
international president. (Hughes got the job when his colleague, John
Bowers, stepped down in 2007.) According to the Journal of Commerce, the
two split in a dispute over collective bargaining strategy. But, unexpected
as it may seem, that's not the biggest news.
In the last few years, an impressive reform movement,
the Longshore Workers
Coalition, supported by rank and filers, black and white, and some
elected local officers are demanding democratic changes and a more militant
stand against employers. The LWC seems to be growing in influence and
legitimacy. In August, it led a picket line demonstration at an emergency
meeting of ILA International Executive Board to protest a proposed Atlantic
Coast contract, one supported by President Hughes. In September, according
to the LWC, its intervention helped convince the union's 200-member Wagescale
Committee, a delegated body, to reject the deal.
In the old days, that kind of insurgency could ---
and sometimes did --- mean death. But today?
Obviously angling for LWC support, Harold Daggett,
presumptive opposition candidate for international president, and now
part of the union establishment paid his respects to the LWC. He told
the Journal of Commerce, "They're fighting for the working men. There's
things that they want to do that I don't believe in, but a lot of things
they say is true."
Other articles on
the ILA:
A
formidable force for reform in the ILA
Steelworker battles for democracy in ILA L. 2038(7/09-8/09)
Mob ousted, reformers
win in ILA Local 1588(3/07-4/07)
In
the ILA: rank-and-file action, government intervention, and a major legal victory
(7/06-8/06)
Feds file
suit vs rackets in ILA(7/05-8/05)
Battling corruption in the ILA: a partial chronology(7/05-8/05)
Reform
movement spreads in ILA (12/04-1/05)
Longshore
workers nearly reject master contract (9/04-10/04)
Question and Answer: RICO monitorship in ILA?
(9/04-10/04)
Who will police the Longshoremen's
ethics code? (1/04-3/04)
ILA Baltimore local threatened with
trusteeship (5/03-6/03)
Nine years without
a contract in ILA Lake Charles Local (3/03-4/03)
Reformers win majority in
harbor workers local 333, ILA (8/9 2002)
AUD at Charleston ILA
meeting (News 4/02)
Charleston Longshore unions win major victory 2/3 2002
"Charleston
Longshore workers lead battle for reform." 8/9 2001
Links to Longshore worker websites
Information and resources for
ILA members on this website.
back
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In Steel Local 12-369: A
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Memoriam: Ruth S. Spitz
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