Found at: http://www.pww.org/article/articleprint/13447/ |
‘Good Jobs, Clean Air!’ Rally backs clean, safe ports plan |
OAKLAND, Calif. — If a broad coalition of labor and community activists, health advocates and environmentalists has its way, pollution from ports around the country will be cut drastically in coming years, while at the same time, a group of port workers wrongly called “independent contractors” will gain a living wage and benefits.
The Port of Los Angeles has already approved a Clean Trucks Program, and in the coming months, Oakland could become the nation’s second port to do so.
“This idea of good jobs and clean air, it’s based on the ideas that made America great,” Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa told over 2,000 labor, environmental and community activists here as they prepared to march to the port July 22.
As international trade increases, Villaraigosa said, “we want to make sure the people who move those goods move them with jobs that pay a living wage, a union wage that has health care and pension benefits. Business has said for a long time, what’s good for business is good for America,” he added. “But what’s good for labor is good for America as well.”
Oakland Mayor Ronald Dellums thanked his LA counterpart “for his guts, his heart, his courage, his integrity,” and for being “the first mayor in America” to stand up for such a program. He vowed that Oakland will be second.
The neighboring ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach together are the nation’s largest container port, and Oakland ranks fourth.
The California Air Resources Board says port-related pollution causes 2,400 deaths statewide each year. Rates of asthma and other respiratory diseases soar in neighborhoods near the ports, while dock workers and truck drivers constantly breathe diesel soot.
Though their trucks are among the big polluters, port drivers themselves can’t afford to buy and maintain low emission trucks. Forced into “independent contractor” status since deregulation in 1980, they earn as little as $10 and $11 an hour.
The LA Port Commissioners voted in March for a phased-in Clean Trucks Program under which all trucks must meet 2007 emissions standards by January 2012. Trucking firms must gradually hire drivers as employees, taking over responsibility to maintain the trucks. The workers will then have the right to organize.
The LA City Council and Mayor Villaraigosa support the program. Long Beach, which started planning in tandem with LA, split off earlier this year and okayed a program under which drivers will continue as independent contractors.