Hundreds of truckers from companies servicing the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach have walked off the job to protest what they say are unfair labor practices due to improper employee classification.
UPDATED — Hundreds of truckers represented by the Teamsters Union from companies servicing the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach have walked off the job to protest what they say are unfair labor practices due to improper employee classification.
The drivers are claiming wage theft on part of their employers due to being misclassified. Despite being labeled independent contract workers, the drivers are driving trucks owned by the trucking companies and working exclusively for them without being able to negotiate rates, refuse loads or take work from competitors.
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Striking drivers are picketing Intermodal Bridge Transport, Pacific 9 Transportation, Pacer Cartage, and Harbor Rail Transport. A fifth company, Green Fleet Systems, avoided a strike, choosing to enter into a bargaining agreement with its drivers.
Additionally, drivers and their supporters are picketing company trucks as they enter marine terminals at the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, rail yards throughout the region, and customer warehouses as far east as Mira Loma and as far south as the U.S. Mexico border, according to the Teamsters.
Some of the drivers have filed claims for the job misclassification with the U.S. Department of Labor and the California Department of Labor, while others have filed individual and class action lawsuits, according to a Teamsters Union representative.
In April of last year, seven port truck drivers misclassified as independent contractors employed by Pacer Cartage were awarded $2.2 million for unlawful deductions, reimbursable business expenses, interest and waiting time penalties by the California Labor Commissioner Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.
“In every case that has been adjudicated so far, the courts for the regulatory agencies have determined that they are, in fact, employees, not independent contractors,” Barb Maynard, spokesperson for the Teamsters Union, told Truckinginfo.
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Many of the drivers involved in these lawsuits also claim that they are being harassed by their employers for their participation, she said.
“They are being harassed, they are being intimidated – it’s just relentless,” said Maynard. “They are under attack by these company owners – that attacking is illegal.”
Last year, drivers for Southern California ports protested over the same issue, claiming unfair treatment thanks to not being officially labeled full-time employees.
“This is an unfair labor practice strike,” said Maynard. “What it’s all about is that they’re being misclassified as independent contractors and they want the wage theft to stop.”
This strike comes on the heels of recent labor contract disputes between the longshoremen and the Pacific Maritime Association which crippled West Coast ports for weeks, the repercussions of which are still being felt long after being settled.
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"I believe now is a horrible time to introduce any slow-downs to the supply chain," Weston LaBar, executive director of the Harbor Trucking Association, said in a statement late last week. "If they want to be a part of the real solution perhaps they should suspend these efforts until we get closer to a normal flow of cargo in the San Pedro Bay. We don't want to put any more jobs in our region in jeopardy."
Listen as transportation attorney and TruckSafe Consulting President Brandon Wiseman joins the HDT Talks Trucking podcast to unpack the “regulatory turbulence” of last year and what it means for trucking fleets in 2026.
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