New York Port hustles to cut rare logjam amid Covid labor woes
The New York area’s port terminals have largely avoided backlogs like those gripping the twin gateways of Los Angeles and Long Beach, California, where scores of vessels are still running into delays of more than three weeks to offload.

“We have seen a spike in the number of labor going out into quarantine,” Port Authority Director Sam Ruda said in an interview this week. The average wait at anchorage for container carriers was 4.75 days in the final week of 2021, compared with an average of 1.6 days for all of last year.
Jim McNamara, a spokesman for the International Longshoremen’s Association, said in an email that the number of its members unavailable to work because of Covid is running about 350 a day. Still, he called the impact “slight” because some crews are returning from quarantine or illness and others are available from cruise-ship terminals.
The New York area’s port terminals, the busiest on the East Coast, have largely avoided backlogs like those gripping the twin gateways of Los Angeles and Long Beach, California, where scores of vessels are still running into delays of more than three weeks to offload.
Ruda credited the waterfront workforce and other stakeholders that run 24-7 operations for keeping short the anchorage waits for New York. But some factors have converged to require the queue: omicron’s spread across the region, year-end holiday time off for workers, and an increase in charter vessels needing one-time berth space.
Add those issues to what was already a busy 2021 and a backlog was unavoidable. The port has been running at full capacity for almost two years, handling almost 27% more volume in November 2021 than it did in November 2019.

The number of containers per ship visit is also notable. From January through October last year, the New York-New Jersey terminals greeted 298 vessels capable of carrying 10,000 to 15,000 20-foot containers, up from 55 four years earlier, when a $1.7 billion project to raise the Bayonne Bridge to accommodate those bigger vessels was completed.

“On an order of magnitude, it does seem quite small, but it does have our attention,” he said.
West Coast Woes

As of late Friday, there were 105 container vessels lining up to enter L.A.-Long Beach, up from 91 on Dec. 29, according to the Marine Exchange of Southern California.
Such congestion strains ocean shipping capacity and helps push up the cost of transporting goods from Asia to both major U.S. coasts, ultimately spelling higher costs for American companies and consumers.
The Drewry World Container Index showed the spot rate for a 40-foot container to Los Angeles from Shanghai rose for a fourth straight week, to $10,520, in the week ended Jan. 6. The rate for Shanghai to New York increased to $13,518, the highest since late October.
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