The strike action is set for next Monday, Wednesday and Friday.

Around two-thirds of Spain’s imports and exports pass through its ports, and prolonged industrial action could be painful for the country’s automobile industry and chemical sector, and ruin fruit and vegetable cargoes.

Earlier this month, Spain’s parliament passed the long-delayed reform to bring port regulation closer to that of the European Union after months of fines by the EU for failing to crack down on closed-shop hiring.

Companies currently have no say over hiring and firing at Spanish ports. The new law aims to permit them to choose their own staff rather than being bound by union-approved lists.

Workers last week cancelled five out of eight days of planned strikes – which spanned every other working day between May 24 and June 9 – after port representatives said they had reached a preliminary agreement on workers’ rights with dockers.

But unions said they would now press ahead with the remaining three days of strikes after talks broke down over safeguarding the more than 6,000 jobs in Spanish ports.

http://www.reuters.com/article/spain-ports-idUSL8N1IY50Q?rpc=401&

Source: reuters
2017-06-02

Naval gazing, what lies ahead for the supply chain Rockford IL

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