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Dec/15 Gulf Stream license renewed despite protests
Comments 0 | Recommend 0By ANTHONY GRAY
Herald Staff Writer
#Brownsville Navigation District commissioners renewed the operating license
of Gulf Stream Marine Inc. amid protests from union port workers who contend
the company has lowered the wage scale at the Port of Brownsville.
Commissioners voted 3-2 to allow Gulf Stream, a non-union stevedoring company
that loads and unloads cargo ships, to continue operating at the port for
another year.
More than 100 people packed the lobby of BND headquarters, most of them in
support of the International Longshoremen's Union. The union bitterly opposed
the license renewal.
Commissioners Julius Collins, Dr. Joseph Coulter and W.W. Reed voted in favor
of the license renewal, which was recommended by port staff. Pro-union
Commissioners Evelon Dale and Joe Saenz opposed the measure.
Reed was pressured to abstain from voting on the renewal issue. When Gulf
Stream's license was first awarded in December 1993, he abstained from voting.
He said his vote would be a conflict of interest because his son-in-law, Mark
Hoskins, worked for Gulf Stream. Hoskins is president of Admiral Shipping Co.,
a shipping agent for ships for which Gulf Stream is a stevedore.
"I have been advised by legal counsel that my vote is not a conflict of
interest. My son-in-law, Mark Hoskins, is not receiving any payment from Gulf
Stream Marine. I am prepared to vote," Reed said.
Before the vote, Gulf Stream attorney Tom Fleming and ILA attorney Ed
Stapleton were each given 20 minutes to present their respective arguments.
Stapleton produced a replica of one of Reed's recent campaign posters that
read "No Conflicts of Interest." Attached was a Nov. 25 Gulf Stream shipping
receipt signed by Hoskins.
"It is not free enterprise when a company comes in and forces lower wages,"
Stapleton said. "What they've (Gulf Stream) done is come in and busted a
contract at a public port."
In rebuttal, Fleming contended that Gulf Stream has invested $2 million in the
port within 10 months, created 30 new jobs and created a 211,000 metric ton
increase in port cargo. He further defended Hoskins' relationship with the
company.
"Mark Hoskins is not now, nor has ever been, an employee of Gulf Stream
Marine. He has never derived one nickel in direct compensation from this
company," Fleming said.
However, ILA President Harry Noble said that because of Gulf Stream's entry to
the port, union wages at the port have fallen by nearly 50 percent while
overall tonnage has increased at the port.
"This is union busting, pure and simple. I think they are just testing the
water with the ILA," Noble said. "We just have to wait until '96 to get rid
of the commissioners. We'll just fight it politically."
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