News Flash for International Household goods shipments to Ghana

Ghana: Process for Advance Shipment Information (ASHI)

Rainier Overseas Movers wishes to inform you that for all shipments with a Bill of Lading dated from March 1, 2015, the Ghana Shippers’ Authority (GSA) is implementing the Advance Shipment Information (ASHI) for all shipments bound for the seaports of Ghana, transit cargoes included.

As from this date, each Bill of Lading (OBL) for maritime shipments to Ghanaian seaports will need to be covered by a validated ASHI number. It is possible to pre-validate and obtain an ASHI number to include on the OBL, after which the ASHI needs to be validated within seven working days.

For this purpose, the GSA signed a representation agreement with Antaser Afrique, who will be in charge of the issuance and validation of the ASHI through its dedicated website www.antaser.com.

The Antaser web-application for Ghana will open in the course of this week.

Please note that the ASHI number needs to be mentioned on the Bill of Lading. Cargoes not covered by a valid ASHI will not be cleared through the Ghana Customs and appropriate fines will be charged.

Should you have any questions or concerns, please contact Rainier Overseas Movers….your international household goods moving specialists since 1979.

Moving Household Goods Overseas & the End of the West Coast Port Slowdown

Rainier Overseas Movers, Inc., along with many other international household goods forwarders, was pleased to hear the west coast port labor slowdown has finally ended.   Negotiators for the International Longshore and Warehouse Union and the Pacific Maritime Association have reached a tentative, coast wide contract agreement for five years after more than nine months of bargaining. Rainier Overseas Movers has been keeping all its clients updated on all vessel schedule changes that have occurred over the last few months. ILWU President Robert McEllrath and PMA President James McKenna said they were pleased to reach the tentative contract agreement. “We are also pleased that our ports can now resume full operations,” they said in a joint release. The membership of both groups must now vote to ratify the contract, a process that could take several weeks. The details of the agreement were not immediately available. The deal was also praised by Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia. He thanked President #Obama and Labor Secretary Thomas Perez for helping to push the agreement forward in a difficult negotiating environment. The National Retail Federation said the efforts of management and labor must now be to clear the backlog of containers and vessels at West Coast ports. Rainier Overseas Movers continues to monitor all west coast international household goods shipments as the port congestion slowly clears.

US West Coast Port Strike – 2015

Via: http://www.joc.com/port-news/longshoreman-labor/pacific-maritime-association/west-coast-ports-easing-back-full-production-pma-says_20150223.html?mgs1=81adjjetQE
“With a tentative contract in hand, West Coast ports are easing their way back into full production, although the performance of longshoremen Monday was not consistent up and down coast, according to the Pacific Maritime Association.
In Los Angeles-Long Beach, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union resumed full dispatch of skilled yard crane operators after reducing dispatches from 110 to 35 per day beginning in early November. These operators are crucial to dissipating the container backlog at the largest U.S. port complex because they transfer containers from the stacks to the truckers who dray the containers to distribution facilities and intermodal rail yards.
Employers in Seattle and Tacoma said crane productivity Monday was rapidly approaching normal. During the hard-timing of employers that the PMA said began on Oct. 31, the average container moves per crane, per hour, plunged below 20 from normal levels of 26-28.
Problems surfaced in Oakland over the weekend when ILWU Local 10 called a work stoppage because of a disagreement over dispatching procedures and break times. The area arbitrator was called in to issue a ruling — the first time an arbitrator was allowed to adjudicate a dispute on the West Coast since the previous ILWU contract expired on July 1 — and the arbitrator ruled that Local 10 was engaging in an illegal work stoppage.
Longshoremen in Oakland were working the yards and gates normally on Monday, although the dispatching of crane operators was restricted, so operations at the Northern California port were still compromised. This was reportedly more of an intra-union disagreement between Local 10 officers and steady crane operators.
Nevertheless, the incident demonstrates that even though the new contract is tentative and must still be ratified by the ILWU membership, the grievance and arbitration process in the contract is back in effect. This should go a long way toward preventing local disagreements such as occurred in Oakland from dragging on endlessly as the incidents did in recent months.
Even with these improvements in productivity, however, the cargo and vessel backlogs at West Coast ports are expected to take months to clear. The ports and employers predict it could be two to three months before Los Angeles-Long Beach is completely back to normal, although the northern ports could require somewhat less time than that.
The Marine Exchange of Southern California reported Monday there were 27 containerships at anchor, or three fewer than on Sunday. Oakland reported five ships at anchor and 13 waiting outside of the Golden Gate Bridge. Ten ships were at anchor outside of Seattle and Tacoma on Monday.
The process of ILWU ratification of the proposed contract will begin in March. ILWU spokesman Craig Merrilees said the union will hold a caucus attended by 90 democratically-elected delegates. They will meet for one week and determine whether to recommend the agreement to the general membership. If they do recommend approval, the full text of the proposed contract will be submitted to the rank and and file, and membership meetings will be held at the individual ports. Voting will be held by secret ballot.
Merrilees said this process can take several months, but “during the process, work continues as normal at all of the ports.”