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.