Current:Home > reviewsStrikers have shut down a vital Great Lakes shipping artery for days, and negotiations are looming -Edge Finance Strategies
Strikers have shut down a vital Great Lakes shipping artery for days, and negotiations are looming
View
Date:2025-04-13 21:53:04
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A strike has shut down all shipping on the St. Lawrence Seaway, interrupting exports of grain and other goods from Canada and the United States via the Great Lakes to the rest of the world.
Around 360 workers in Ontario and Quebec with Unifor, Canada’s largest private-sector union, walked out early Sunday in a dispute over wages with the St. Lawrence Seaway Management Corp. The strike has shut down 13 locks between Lake Erie and Montreal, bottling up ships in the Great Lakes and preventing more ships from coming in.
The St. Lawrence Seaway and Great Lakes are part of a system of locks, canals, rivers and lakes that stretches more than 2,300 miles (3,700 kilometers) from the Atlantic Ocean to the western tip of Lake Superior in Minnesota and Wisconsin. It carried over $12 billion U.S. dollars (nearly $17 billion Canadian) worth of cargo last year. Ships that travel it include oceangoing “salties” and “lakers” that stick to the lakes.
It’s the first time that a strike has shut down the vital shipping artery since 1968. Before the union walked out early Sunday, it said they were still “1,000 nautical miles apart on wages” despite several months of negotiations.
The strike was in its third day Tuesday when the Canadian government ordered both sides to return Friday to the bargaining table with a federal mediator. U.S. officials are pushing the Canadian government and the Seaway corporation for a settlement.
“We have grain that feeds the world that’s not moving. We have salt that goes on winter roads for safety that’s not moving. We have iron ore for steelmaking that’s not moving,” said Jason Card, spokesman for the binational Chamber of Marine Commerce in Ottawa.
Officials with Seaway management and the union did not respond to messages seeking comment. Management has asked the Canadian government to invoke a law to let ships carrying grain transit the system, but so far it has declined to intervene.
“Unifor will comply with the call to mediation and will continue to support our members on the picket line while talks take place,” the union said in a statement.
Management said in a separate statement that it was committed to negotiating a fair wage agreement, but that it wasn’t ready for something comparable to the big increases that Unifor recently won from some automakers. It said the situations are “vastly different,” and that Seaway workers have negotiated wage increases well over the rate of inflation during the past 20 years.
It’s not clear precisely how many oceangoing ships are stuck inside or outside the system. When the strike began, seaway management said over 100 vessels outside the system were affected, but that number was expected to grow as the strike goes on.
The website MarineTraffic.com on Thursday showed numerous oceangoing ships were still inside the system. A major bottleneck is the closed Welland Canal in Ontario. Around 25 ships — salties and lakers — were anchored outside the Lake Ontario and Lake Erie entrances.
A U.S. Navy warship, the littoral combat ship USS Marinette, was supposed to leave Cleveland on Lake Erie on Monday, but remains stuck.
Other stranded ships included five at the major grain port of Thunder Bay, Ontario, on Lake Superior and two docked on the Detroit River between Lakes Huron and Erie. They won’t be able to get past Lake Erie until the Seaway reopens.
Shipments within the four Great Lakes from Superior to Erie such as iron ore and coal can still go through.
John Jamian, director of operations for the Port of Detroit, said the strike has already affected eight ships that were bound for Detroit, ships carrying steel coils and slab steel for the auto industry and cement for the construction industry. And he said the number could grow.
“Bear in mind each one of those ships holds a lot of tonnage. Those ships are not coming into the system,” Jamian said. “I know one is still in Europe with cargo and destined for Detroit. She’s in a holding pattern.”
The strike has also worried officials in the Twin Ports of Duluth, Minnesota, and Superior, Wisconsin, where the Cyprus-flagged, Polish-run Isadora departed Monday with a load of grain for Algeria. MarineTraffic.com showed that it was headed into Lake Erie, but it can go no farther without a resolution.
“There’s always a tremendous amount of shipping activity in the fourth quarter with it being peak harvest season, so this is an especially bad time of year for any interruption of seaway operations,” said Jason Hron, spokesman for the Duluth Seaway Port Authority. “It really has cascading effects through the entire St. Lawrence Seaway-Great Lakes shipping system.”
Hron said a few more salties that are already in the lakes are expected to arrive in the next few days, but what happens to them after they load and depart is an open question.
“North America’s main inland trade corridor should not be used as a labor dispute pawn,” Hron said. “And so Great Lakes ports and unions are urging the Canadian government to intercede directly and hasten a resolution to this dispute that reopens the seaway to full function immediately.”
veryGood! (19)
Related
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Trump expected to turn his full focus on Harris at first rally since Biden’s exit from 2024 race
- 2024 Olympics and Paralympics: Meet Team USA Going for Gold in Paris
- Olympic gold-medal swimmers were strangers until living kidney donation made them family
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- 2024 Olympics: Céline Dion Will Return to the Stage During Opening Ceremony
- U.S. home prices reach record high in June, despite deepening sales slump
- New owner nears purchase of Red Lobster after chain announced bankruptcy and closures
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- Arizona State Primary Elections Testing, Advisory
Ranking
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Judge asked to block slave descendants’ effort to force a vote on zoning of their Georgia community
- Ethiopia mudslides death toll nears 230 as desperate search continues in southern Gofa region
- Some Republicans are threatening legal challenges to keep Biden on the ballot. But will they work?
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- What is social anxiety? It's common but it doesn't have to be debilitating.
- Officers left post to go look for Trump rally gunman before shooting, state police boss says
- FTC launches probe into whether surveillance pricing can boost costs for consumers
Recommendation
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
Psst! Madewell’s Sale Has Cute Summer Staples up to 70% Off, Plus an Extra 40% off With This Secret Code
New York City’s Marshes, Resplendent and Threatened
Elon Musk Says Transgender Daughter Vivian Was Killed by Woke Mind Virus
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
Minnesota school settles with professor who was fired for showing image of the Prophet Muhammad
2024 Olympics: Céline Dion Will Return to the Stage During Opening Ceremony
An Alaska veteran is finally getting his benefits — 78 years after the 103-year-old was discharged