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Terminals at California's third-busiest port resume regular hours on Monday

Published 07/25/2022, 12:12 PM
Updated 07/25/2022, 05:50 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A cargo ship is seen at the port of Oakland as independent truck driver continue protesting against California's new law known as AB5, in Oakland, California, U.S., July 22, 2022. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

By Lisa Baertlein

(Reuters) -Marine terminals at California's Port of Oakland opened for normal operations on Monday after port leaders and police ended a week-long independent truck driver protest of the state's new "gig worker" law, which stranded cargo on ships, docks and warehouses and worsened U.S. supply chain snarls.

Port executives and police restricted protesters to designated "free speech zones" and warned that violators would be cited. That cleared the way for trucks to pick up and drop off goods at the Northern California seaport's four marine terminals that were subject to blockades last week.

"There are some protesters out there, but they're in the penalty box," said Bill Aboudi, a trucking company owner who supported protests of the law formally known as AB5.

The restart of cargo shipments at California's third-busiest port and busiest agricultural export hub created another snarl - traffic jams in and around the port, whose maritime operations contribute an estimated $56.6 billion to the state's economy.

"We have five days worth of work, technically six days of work, that we're supposed to be doing in one day. It's not gonna happen," Aboudi said.

Truckers started protesting California seaports after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to take up a lawsuit from the California Trucking Association on June 30. That cleared the way for the lifting of an injunction that helped stall enactment of the law for more than two years.

The new law would make it harder for businesses that rely on freelance workers, also known as gig workers, to classify them as independent contractors. Protesting truckers said it would force them to shoulder hefty costs previously borne by the companies that hire them to transport loads.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A cargo ship is seen at the port of Oakland as independent truck driver continue protesting against California's new law known as AB5, in Oakland, California, U.S., July 22, 2022. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

Independent operator Ricardo Gil, 62, said he wanted to continue protesting but didn't want to risk arrest.

"We were very close to getting what we want," said Gil.

 

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