Los Angeles Times

Southern California ports are losing to East Coast rivals, threatening LA-area jobs

From the peaceful vantage point of Angels Gate Park, high above San Pedro Bay in San Pedro, California, a huge floating traffic jam of cargo ships was clearly visible when it reached its peak of 109 vessels in January, stranding toys, clothing, semiconductors, cars and a long list of items headed to stores, factories and online shoppers' doorsteps. The backup that began early in 2020 is gone ...
A handful of cargo ships are anchored outside the breakwater of the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, far less than the 100 ship backlog of cargo ships at the ports earlier in the year on Monday, Dec. 12, 2022, in Los Angeles, California.

From the peaceful vantage point of Angels Gate Park, high above San Pedro Bay in San Pedro, California, a huge floating traffic jam of cargo ships was clearly visible when it reached its peak of 109 vessels in January, stranding toys, clothing, semiconductors, cars and a long list of items headed to stores, factories and online shoppers' doorsteps.

The backup that began early in 2020 is gone now, but big problems remain for the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, and by extension, the tens of thousands of Southern California workers whose jobs are dependent on the twin harbors and the international trade that flows through them.

That's because U.S. retailers and manufacturers — hurt by the logjam and worried about a potential dockworkers strike — figured out workarounds that sent their cargo containers to ports on the East and Gulf coasts, which have been investing heavily for years to grab shipping business away from Southern California.

The lost freight represents a serious blow to the Southern California economy if that business doesn't return. And experts say some is gone forever.

"The ports have a huge impact on the regional economy with longshore jobs at the docks, trucking jobs and warehouse and distribution employment that extends far out into the Inland Empire. And

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times4 min read
California Exodus Left A Gaping Population Hole. Can The Golden State Bounce Back?
Despite a recent uptick in population, California still has a long way to go to make up for the exodus that began in 2019 and accelerated during the pandemic. Though the state population grew 0.17% in 2023 — the first year of growth since the COVID-1
Los Angeles Times4 min readAmerican Government
Jackie Calmes: Whatever Big Oil Wants, Big Oil Gets. As Long As It Bankrolls Trump
What better sign could there be that we’re drowning in political outrage, that we’re inured to it, than this: A national newspaper scooped this month that Donald Trump gathered about two dozen oil industry executives for a chopped steak dinner at his
Los Angeles Times8 min read
Sammy Roth: Meet The Comedians Telling Hilarious Jokes About Climate Change
LOS ANGELES — Lots of people enjoy laughing at billionaires — but it wasn’t just any billionaires who were the targets of Esteban Gast’s recent comedic jabs at the Crow, an intimate comedy club just off Metro’s E Line tracks in Santa Monica. After ad

Related Books & Audiobooks