Posted on 08/02/2018 11:02:53 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Ever want to be a longshore worker? Nows your chance.
The workers load and unload ships and move cargo around ports. Full-time jobs pay an average of $175,000 a year and include a benefits package costing more than $110,000, according to the Pacific Maritime Association.
But to get to that point you have to start somewhere.
The Pacific Maritime Association, which represents shipping lines and terminal operators at West Coast ports, is hiring part-time workers in Tacoma the first time in several years.
Shipping traffic, and the associated work, ebbs and flows. During high traffic times, the shipping lines call for reinforcements from a pool of casuals part-time longshore workers.
If the past is any indication, a flood of applicants will seek the few hundred slots. Those picked will know about Aug. 20.
More than 15,000 people applied in 2015, the last time casual openings were available. From them, about 325 people were picked in a lottery-style drawing. In 2013, more than 14,000 applied for the lottery in just four days, and 226 people were selected for casual status.
This time, the online application will be open for a week, closing Aug. 9. (Applications are not accepted by mail.)
Its kind of a roll of the dice but winning the lottery is by no means a ticket to a job, said Dean McGrath, president of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 23, based in Tacoma. Its a ticket to a foot in the door and the rest of that is kind of up to you.
Casual workers have erratic schedules and uncertain hours. There are no benefits, such as health insurance or a pension.
Its by no means a regular job, McGrath said. Your life becomes dependent on ship schedules and you are not going to be doing the same thing every day.
Casual workers must show up to the ILWU office in person to check to see whether work is available that day. Work is posted by 7 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. each day, McGrath said.
There is a lot of unpredictability, even for full-time workers, he said. You never know if youre going to be out in really bad, brutal weather, lashing a container ship or driving a piece of equipment.
It took McGrath 10 years to earn full-time status. During that time, he ran a side business painting houses to keep the bills paid.
A large pool of workers plans to retire in coming years, he said, and as positions open up, casuals who have worked the most hours will be selected for full-time positions. They are paid the same rate as Longshore union members, but work far fewer hours.
Casuals who stick with it can earn full-time status, but how long that takes depends on turnover of full-time workers, the demands of the shipping industry and the pace of international trade.
If picked as a casual, workers must pass a criminal background check and complete training for the physically demanding job. Applicants must be 18 or older, speak English well enough to understand verbal and written safety warnings and have a valid drivers license.
For more information and to submit an application, log on to tacoma.casualdrawingapp.net/public.
As I’ve said before, this is the best job market in my working life time.
No doubt.
In 2009, lots and lots of people were being laid off.
Gee, What would have caused that? I’ve no idea(;>)
Sometimes I wish I were 18 again. I could have my job I always wanted.
$285,000 a year for working on the docks. Of course they got a heck of a union.
I always wanted to be like Darren Stevens in an advertising agency coming up with ad campaigns. That’s mostly why I watched Bewitched.
Yes they do.
Want a $175K longshore job? Heres your chance - if youre lucky. And patient (Washington State) ... and be sure to spend long hours in the union hall trying to make friends with strangers who may or may not speak english. Its who you know, and if you are lucky, you will know the right person to get hired.
I grew up in new Jersey and the father of one of our neighbors was a Longshoreman on the docks of new York. His contract stipulated that as long as the companies were in business they had to pay him whether they actually needed him or not. Every day I would see him sitting outside with a quart bottle of Budweiser by his feet. He would go through a case of quarts a day. One of his sons was my age and he told me that his father went in to work 1 or 2 days a month. Not bad work if you can get it.
Leaders of the ILWU were traditionally commies starting way back. For that kind of salary I say ‘greetings Comrade, death to the Imperialist running dogs’.
-— I always wanted to be like darren stevens— Jinx!!!
This union is organized crime. They should all be fired and replaced with non-union workers.
Dude, I was about 10 years old and I watched it for Samantha!
“I always wanted to be like Darren Stevens in an advertising agency coming up with ad campaigns. Thats mostly why I watched Bewitched.”
Uh huh. And guess why I wanted to be an astronaut.
That’s a long way from Marlon Brando in “On the Waterfront”.
“I could’ve been somebody. I could’ve been a contender. But now I’m just a bum.”
$285,000 a year for working on the docks. Of course they got a heck of a union.
Yeh, for sure. Its my guess that nepotism is rampant and you have to be born into the union in order to get in and get one of these jobs....
I’m pretty sure you have to have something on, in, or under a union honcho to have a chance at that job.
I wanted to work for the railroad but at the time you were not getting a job with them unless you knew someone or were related to someone. I think you posted an article about the railroads hiring.
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