Longshore Bigs Bicker Over Broken Benefits
By Bennett BaumerFrom the February 22, 2007 issue | Posted in Local | Email this article
Clockwise from top left: John Bowers, George Barrone, Al Cernadas, and Harold Daggett
Since beating a labor racketeering rap two years ago, top officials with the troubled International Longshoremen Association (ILA) could now be jockeying for the power to lead the East Coast Union. An unsigned flier circulating throughout the New York/New Jersey ports over the past couple weeks is calling for a “Walk in Solidarity” to protest cuts in health benefits and poor financial management.
The flier comes just months before a potential shift of power in the governmentsupervised Bayonne, New Jersey Local 1588. Progressive union militants are gearing to win an election and wrest power from decades of corrupt leadership in the port early this spring. The federal government has had a trusteeship over the Bayonne local since January 2003.
“Nothing happened,” said ILA spokesperson Jim McNamara in reference to the job action. “If it [flier] wasn’t signed, I wouldn’t put much credence in it.”
The cryptic flier lambasted the federal government’s “attacks” and blamed long-time ILA President John Bowers and Secretary Treasure Robert Gleason for deteriorating health benefits. Apart from criticizing the government and international president, the flier is curious because it lauds former Newark Local 1235 President Al Cernadas and current General Organizer Harold Daggett, who both formerly sat on the union’s health benefits fund. In 2005, Cernadas resigned his post in disgrace and admitted to labor racketeering and other fraud. In the 2005 federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) complaint against the international union, the government claims the Genovese crime family picked Daggett to lead the union once Bowers retired.
The union’s health benefits fund has been on shaky financial ground as many rank and file members have had problems obtaining proper coverage and hundreds of doctors have dropped out of the plan. Open criticism of union officials is rare in the ILA, a union with a long organized crime affiliation. Labor militants who speak out too loudly risk anything from the loss of job hours to physical violence by enforcers in New York’s powerful Cosa Nostra families.
The octogenarian ILA president, John Bowers has made no formal announcement of his retirement from the union. However, his departure is anticipated sometime soon, which will create a power vacuum. Executive Vice President Richard Hughes seems an obvious choice to succeed Bowers though delegates representing each port local elect the international president. The candidate who shores up the delegates will win the power of the presidency.
In 2005 the federal government filed a RICO case against ILA General Organizer Harold Daggett and a vice president, Arthur Coffey on labor racketeering and other fraud. Both were acquitted of the charges, dealing a blow to the government’s attempt to take over the union. Coffey then broke ranks with the international union as he squabbled over the union refusing to pay his legal fees. A third codefendant in the case was Larry Ricci, a reputed Cosa Nostra capo in the Genovese crime family, who became absent half way through the trial. Police later found Ricci’s body in the trunk of a silver Acura parked at a Jersey diner.
ANCHORS ON THE PORT
JOHN BOWERS
As president of one of the smallest unions in the AFL-CIO, John Bowers is the third highest paid labor official in the country. Bowers earns $590,194 each year, according to Labor Notes. Bowers is an alleged associate of the Genovese crime family. During a union business trip in Miami, Bowers was told by Capo George Barone that Harold Daggett was the Genovese family’s choice to succeed Bowers as president. “I am alone: one-on-one. I know of his reputation. I am not going to ask a lot of questions. I am figuring now how the hell to get out of the place,’’ Bowers told the feds.
HAROLD DAGGETT
The general organizer of the ILA union, Daggett was tried in the Brooklyn federal court, along with Arthur Coffey and Lawrence Ricci – for involvement in an eight-year scheme to divert hundreds of thousands of dollars from ILA workers’ health and welfare funds to the Genovese crime family. During the 2005 trial Daggett testified that former Genovese Capo George Barone held a gun to his head in the back of an East Harlem grocery store to keep Daggett in line. “I was so nervous I urinated all over myself,” said Daggett. He was eventually acquitted on all charges.
AL CERNADAS
The former president of Newark Local 1235 oversaw his local’s 2004 master contract vote at the Newark Airport Holiday Inn. When union members came to witness the vote count, Cernadas cussed them out, refused to reveal the vote tally and then led the team of election “monitors” with ballot boxes in tow to the Holiday Inn bar. Cernadas later pled guilty to fraud and conspiracy charges in the 2005 racketeering suit – the only ILA official to be convicted in the case.
4 Responses to “Longshore Bigs Bicker Over Broken Benefits”
February 23rd, 2007 at 9:06 am
I want to hear from ILA union brothers and sisters as to whether they think that International will ever be able to escape from the auspices of the mob? What will it truely take? Or are we to believe the Bowers and that this is an outdated notion of the union?
February 25th, 2007 at 7:52 am
I am a proud member of the ILA. A Union that I believe to be one of the best, if not the best in the country. Yes, we are small in numbers, but our jobs are amazing, especially in this day in age. The media and the government constantly write about how much our leaders earn, but they never write about the high earnings of the members. Something we are all proud of! In my opinion the whole mafia stereotype is outdated in our industry. I believe it is a ploy for the government to gain control of what is believed to be the most powerful union in the country. Do you think our government wants a blue collar Union having that much impact on a global economy? No way! How come they never write about what the government has done to unions they took control over? If that were to happen the funds would take an enormous hit. Just ask the Teamsters. As far a Local 1588, they had a problem with a local thug who had the bull on some union officals who threatened with their lives. They all were convicted, and the reformers of that local can absolutely run that Local in a democratic manner, but the government “being paid by the ILA” are a little to comfortable in their positions. I am confident after the election in april that evrything will be fine. As far as the benefits are concerned, we have suffered an impact in the port of ny/nj. Our benefits are still one of the best in the country, but the port of Ny/Nj will eventually have to pull out of the national health plan. We will have to have our own plan, and we will be able to help other ports that are in need of coverage with the surplus.
Brothers and Sisters of the ILA we must all stick together in true Union Fashion. Now more than ever! Don’t be fooled by this propaganda. We have a convention this July, and I am confident that we will see our union moving in the right direction. Our government has outsourced most of the american jobs, and we are all lucky that we are in the import business as well. Our jobs are extremely valuable! Think about it, and don’t be fooled.
February 27th, 2007 at 11:24 am
“They all were convicted, and the reformers of that local can absolutely run that Local in a democratic manner, but the government “being paid by the ILA” are a little to comfortable in their positions. I am confident after the election in april that evrything will be fine. As far as the benefits are concerned, we have suffered an impact in the port of ny/nj. Our benefits are still one of the best in the country, but the port of Ny/Nj will eventually have to pull out of the national health plan. We will have to have our own plan, and we will be able to help other ports that are in need of coverage with the surplus.”
I don’t think the ILA should pull out of the national health care fund, that would be bad for all ports. Let’s hope they can run their own local in 1588, but I don’t think the government is comfortable in their positions.


































February 22nd, 2007 at 10:47 am
It would be real coup if anyone not associated with the ILA international leadership can win in the union’s backyard (Port NY/NJ). From reading Labor Notes (www.labornotes.org), in the South the docks are much less tied to the international and the Mafia doesn’t have such a grip (excluding South Florida). I think any change in the ILA will come from the African-American leadership of the South (South Carolina) and any power base that they form in Port NY/NJ is gravy, but important. The question: Even if the reformers can win in 1588, how long they can withstand intense pressure from the international and its “associates?”