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Trucker protest over gig worker law shuts down Oakland’s port

Trucks lined up outside the Port of Oakland
Trucks line up to enter a Port of Oakland shipping terminal in November.
(Noah Berger / Associated Press)
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A protest by truckers angry over a California labor law has shut down cargo operations at the Port of Oakland, it was announced Wednesday.

A statement by the port said that “the shutdown will further exacerbate the congestion of containers” and that port officials are urging operations at shipping terminals to resume.

The protest, which began Monday, involves hundreds of independent big-rig truckers who have blocked the movement of cargo in and out of terminals at the port, which is one of the 10 busiest container ports in the country, according to its website.

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There was no immediate word as to when the protest might end, but it’s worsening supply-chain issues that already have led to cargo ship traffic jams at major ports and stockpiled goods on the dock.

The protest comes as toymakers and other industries enter their peak season for imports as retailers stockpile goods for the fall holidays and back-to-school items.

The truckers are protesting Assembly Bill 5, a gig economy law passed in 2019 that made it harder for companies to classify workers as independent contractors instead of employees, who are entitled to minimum wage and benefits such as workers compensation, overtime and sick pay.

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California companies are scrambling to figure out how AB 5, a sweeping new hiring law, affects them.

Sept. 29, 2019

A federal appeals court ruled last year that the law applies to some 70,000 truck drivers who can be classified as employees of companies that hire them instead of independent contractors.

The International Brotherhood of Teamsters called it a “massive victory” for exploited truckers. But the California Trucking Assn., which sued over the law, had argued that it could make it harder for independent drivers who own their own trucks and operate on their own hours to make a living by forcing them to be classified as employees.

The legal battle stalled enforcement of the law, but last month the U.S. Supreme Court recently decided it wouldn’t review the decision.

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Truckers are now asking Gov. Gavin Newsom to meet and discuss the issue.

Thinking about starting a side hustle? Kathy Kristof, creator of side job review site SideHusl.com, writes about the best and worst of the gig economy.

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Meanwhile, there’s been no word on when the state might begin enforcing the law, which is still being contested in lower courts.

Messages seeking comment from Newsom’s office and the Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development weren’t immediately returned Wednesday evening.

The director of the business and economic development office, Dee Dee Myers, emailed CNBC that “it’s time to move forward, comply with the law and work together to create a fairer and more sustainable industry for all.”

Ports already have been struggling to handle container traffic, much of it from Asia. After the COVID-19 pandemic began to take hold in 2020, cargo traffic to ports slumped drastically. But then it recovered and has been booming since.

“We understand the frustration expressed by the protesters at California ports,” Port of Oakland Executive Director Danny Wan said in the port’s statement. “But prolonged stoppage of port operations in California for any reason will damage all the businesses operating at the ports and cause California ports to further suffer market share losses to competing ports.”

While the port handles many different types of cargo, it is an important distribution point for California’s agricultural products.

“The supply chain already is in crisis. This is a huge disruption,” Peter Friedmann, executive director of the Agriculture Transportation Coalition, told the Wall Street Journal.

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