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Honda slowing US production due to ports dispute

Thu, Feb 19 2015
The labor dispute that idled 29 ports on the West Coast last the weekend, including Los Angeles and Long Beach, CA, is about to make its effects felt on the showroom floor, according to Reuters. Honda, Toyota and Subaru have been trying to work around the labor disagreement, cutting overtime and airlifting parts to factories, but Honda says parts shortages at plants in Indiana, Ohio and Ontario, Canada, are now severe enough to impede production.

The lack of transmissions and some electronic components will slow output of the Honda Accord, Civic, and CR-V – as well as unnamed Acuras. The three affected factories will rework their production schedules from Feb. 16-23.

The ports have reopened this week, and US Labor Secretary Tom Perez has flown to San Francisco to mediate a new agreement between the 20,000 dockworkers represented by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union and the Pacific Maritime Association, which represents the terminals and shipping companies. Talks have been going on for almost nine months and the issues aren't settled; meanwhile, the West Coast ports that handle half the nation's maritime cargo and 70 percent of cargo from Asia are putting all kinds of industries on the ropes, and it's estimated to cost the economy $2 billion a day.

Related Video:

  • News Source: Reuters
  • Image Credit: MARK RALSTON/AFP/Getty Images
  • Government/Legal
  • Plants/Manufacturing
  • UAW/Unions
  • Acura
  • Honda
  • Crossover
  • Sedan

By Jonathon Ramsey


See also: Honda trademarks 'CDX' nameplate, Honda trademarks 'CDX' nameplate, West Coast labor dispute hampers Japanese automakers' US plants.