As port workers strike in the United States, Mexican industry groups are preparing for a potentially significant impact.
U.S. ports from Maine to Texas have been closed due to a strike by the union representing about 45,000 dockworkers ...
A strike that persists for more than a month would likely cause a shortage of some products, although most holiday retail ...
Consumers may soon notice that it's harder to find products like bananas, electronics and *gasp* booze, now that dockworkers ...
The 50,000 members of the union working at ports from Maine to Texas have been on strike since early Tuesday morning, halting the flow of the majority of containerized imports into the United States.
Supply chain experts predict the public won't feel shortages or other effects of the ongoing port strike for three to four ...
The ongoing concerns over supply chain issues have led some consumers to start panic buying and stockpiling goods out of fear ...
Shoppers swarmed to big-box stores and supermarkets in a frenzy of panic buying over the US ports strike — stampeding to ...
The storied union behind the port strike halting ships from Maine to Texas reflects a throwback to more traditional, top-down ...
Port workers going into day three of protests on the east coast stretching from Maine to Texas are demanding higher wages ...
Gene Seroka, executive director of the Port of Los Angeles, says there shouldn’t be any immediate impacts on the west coast.
U.S. ports from Maine to Texas shut down this week when the union representing about 45,000 dockworkers went on strike for the first time since 1977.