MARITIME TRADES DEPARTMENT AFL-CIO
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08/22/07
House Bill Sets Aside $100 Million for Title XI

Legislation that seeks to forestall gridlock in the nation’s transportation system passed the House of Representatives by a vote of 241 to 172.  Among other things, it would enhance employment opportunities for U.S. shipyard workers by establishing a $100 million pilot shipbuilding program for what it calls “short sea shipping.”

The $100 million would be deposited in the Title XI shipbuilding loan guarantee program, which, aside from some meager monies for administrative expenses, has lain dormant for most of the decade.  Economic studies indicate that the monies will generate $2 billion in economic activity for the U.S. shipbuilding industry and its allied trades.

A key provision in the Transportation, Energy, Security and Climate Change Mitigation Act requires the Department of Transportation to develop a short sea shipping program to alleviate escalating rail/highway congestion and associated pollution problems.  While some special interests want to use the opportunity to weaken the nation’s cabotage laws, the Maritime Trades Department, AFL-CIO and its affiliates have been stressing that they believe “short sea shipping”and the Jones Act trades are interchangeable services.

 
UPDATES
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Maritime
Matsuda Confirmed as Maritime Administrator
09/01/10
David Matsuda, who has been serving as acing administrator of the Maritime Administration, recently was confirmed as Maritime Administrator...
Maritime
ITF Updates Its FOC Campaign
08-28-10
The International Transport Workers’ Federation recently voted to update its flag-of-convenience c0ampaign during its quadrennial congress...

GRASSROOTS ACTION
MCTF Updates the Situation in the Gulf
The Maritime Cabotage Task Force has issued an update on the situation along the Gulf Coast, citing retired U.S. Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen, the National Incident Commander for the cleanup effort, as stating "at no time" has the Jones Act inhibited the clean up... more...

Crfisis in the Gulf
Special interest groups seeking to take advantage of developments in the Gulf of Mexico have been asserting that the Jones Act has hindered cleanup efforts. But as the AFL-CIO noted, “Those behind the campaign attacking the Jones Act have two aims: To discredit the federal response to the disaster and to attack unions." The federation quoted information provided by FactCheck.org, a respected, nonpartisan organization dedicated to ensuring fair media coverage. The federation also quoted MTD President Michael Sacco. “The assertion that Obama has invoked the Jones Act on behalf of maritime unions is the most ridiculous” of the Jones Act lies, he said. Moreover, the State Department announced that new offers of aid would be accepted from 12 foreign countries and international organizations... more...

Update on Oil Disaster
Add Rep. Linda Sachez (D-CA) to the growing list of lawmakers who are pushing back on the rampant misinformation campaign that has been hitting the airwaves about the Jones Act in recent weeks. In her published letter to the editor, Sanchez tore into an editorial that appeared in the Washington Post on June 25 calling for a repeal of the nation’s cabotage freight law. "The fact is there is no evidence the Jones Act has interfered with the cleanup in any way,” she wrote... more...

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill
The recent calls against the Jones Act in the wake of the oil spill disaster in the Gulf led MTD President Michael Sacco to devote his monthly column in the July Seafarers International Union publication to refuting the arguments: “There were times in June when I almost had to check my calendar to make sure we weren’t back in the mid-1990s," he wrote. "During that era, well-financed, calculated opposition to American-flag shipping repeatedly attacked the Jones Act, one of the staples of our industry for the last 90 years..." more...

Port Maritime Council Takes Action
Dean Corgey, the executive secretary of the West Gulf Ports Council, said that the offshore oil industry needs to change the way that it does business if the Gulf Coast is ever to stage a comeback from the devastating oil spill that killed 11 workers and led to the worst environmental crisis in the nation’s history. Writing in the Houston Chronicle, he noted, “The answer is simple. The offshore exploration, production and service industry in the Gulf of Mexico, to the best of our knowledge, is 100 percent nonunion and increasingly foreign..." more...

U.S. Cabotage Laws Come Under Attack
Leading members of Congress are setting the record straight about inaccuracies that are being made about the Jones Act and the oil spill cleanup in the Gulf of Mexico... more...

Crisis In the Gulf
On June 25, the Washington Post published an editorial that called for foreign competition on America’s domestic waterways without considering what the ramifications of such action would entail. MTD President Michael Sacco responded immediately: "We find it amazing how your own words come back to bite you. In the case of your editorial, 'Time to Rethink the Jones Act,' your own slogan comes to mind: 'You don’t get it...'" more...

The Jones Act
Special interest groups are seeking to use the crisis in the Gulf of Mexico to overturn the Jones Act, America’s most important cabotage law. Misinformation about the law and the waiver process has been dominating the news. All too often, little or no effort has been made to check the facts (i.e.—asking the U.S. Coast Guard about the number of petitions that have been submitted for waivers of the Jones Act). The Maritime Cabotage Task Force, a grass roots organization dedicated to preserving U.S. cabotage laws, has been correcting the record... more...
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