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VisitOutcome of Dockworkers' Contract Negotiations by Jan 15, 2025?
Ratified as proposed • 25%
Ratified with changes • 25%
Not ratified, negotiations continue • 25%
Not ratified, strike resumes • 25%
Official announcements from the International Longshoremen's Association or the United States Maritime Alliance
45,000 U.S. Dockworkers Suspend Strike Until Jan. 15, 2025 After Tentative 62% Wage Deal
Oct 3, 2024, 10:54 PM
U.S. dockworkers have agreed to suspend their strike until January 15, 2025, to allow time for contract negotiations, following a tentative agreement on wages. The International Longshoremen's Association (ILA), representing 45,000 dockworkers at East and Gulf Coast ports, reached a deal with the United States Maritime Alliance that includes a proposed 61.5% wage increase over six years. The current master contract will be extended until January 15. The strike, which had shut down shipping operations for several days, is expected to end immediately, with workers returning to ports as early as Friday.
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New contract agreement • 25%
Strike resumes • 25%
Further negotiations without strike • 25%
Other outcome • 25%
Union and employer reach agreement • 25%
Government intervention • 25%
Mediation/arbitration • 25%
Strike continues into 2025 • 25%
New contract signed • 25%
Strike resumes • 25%
Contract extended without agreement • 25%
Other outcomes • 25%
Wages • 25%
Working conditions • 25%
Benefits • 25%
Other issues • 25%
Union gets higher wages • 25%
Union gets protections against automation • 25%
Union gets both demands • 25%
Union gets neither demand • 25%
Wage deal ratified • 25%
Wage deal rejected • 25%
New deal proposed • 25%
Strike resumes • 25%
New labor contract agreed • 25%
Government intervention • 25%
Strike continues into 2025 • 25%
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Less than 60% • 25%
61.6% to 63% • 25%
60% to 61.5% • 25%
More than 63% • 25%