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By Michael House | February 8, 2010

The Sydney Ports Corporation (SPC) says addressing ongoing congestion at its Port Botany facility is a priority issue but stevedores are holding up any hopes for the issue to be resolved.

A spokesman for says the corporation has been waiting since August 2009 for stevedores to commit to a process to reduce congestion.

“Sydney Ports has been waiting for six months for both stevedores to respond to repeated requests to agree to implement the operations performance management and provide a formal commitment in writing to implement these reforms,” the spokesman says.

Under the management agreement, the spokesman says trucking operators and stevedores agree to a commercial relationship where a party pays penalties if they fail to meet agreed performance benchmarks.

The spokesman says the port may face government intervention if stevedores continue to be uncooperative.

“The NSW Ports Minister [Paul McLeay] has made it clear, as recently as January, that in the absence of a voluntary agreement the NSW Government will regulate the OPM framework,” he says.

The NSW branch of the Australian Trucking Association says there has been next to no improvements at Port Botany this year.

“It’s still the same old, same old at Port Botany,” Mike Moylan, a port carrier and chairman of the ATA NSW container group says.

“There has been no indication from the government and the ports corporation on any timeframe on when anything will happen. Its just business as usual for us - operating in the dark.”


COMMENTS (2)
Comment by Unknown
posted 7 months ago
Medical billing is the fast growing field. Find your local school to get a degree in medical billing in few months http://bit.ly/aS68sz
Comment by Unknown
posted 7 months ago
Maybe if the government and Sydney Ports invested in the infrastructure around the ports including the roads the congestion by whingeing truckies could be reduced.
Governments,especially this one are good at passing the buck but in all truth they too, like the previous government have failed to adequately invest.
Plus they want to open competition to a third player and continue to pester them to invest more. Thats not how economics works!!!

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