Title 8 › Chapter CHAPTER 12— - IMMIGRATION AND NATIONALITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - IMMIGRATION › Part Part VI— - Special Provisions Relating to Alien Crewmen › § 1288
It stops foreign crew members from doing longshore work in U.S. ports unless certain rules are met. Longshore work means loading or unloading cargo, running cargo equipment, and handling mooring lines. If a local port has one or more union contracts that cover at least 30 percent of longshore workers and those contracts allow crewmen to do the task, foreign crewmen may do it. If there is no such contract covering 30 percent, the ship’s owner or agent must file a written statement (an attestation) with the Secretary of Labor at least 14 days before the work (or later only in an emergency, but not after the work starts). The attestation must show the practice in the port allows it, that the work is not during a strike or lockout, and that it is not meant to affect a union election. The filer must tell the local union or the longshore workers about the attestation. Attestations last for one year and cover crew who arrive during that year if the ship’s list says the conditions still hold. The Secretary of Labor keeps a public list of filings and handles complaints and investigations. If initial evidence supports a complaint, the Secretary can order work stopped while a hearing happens. Complaints must be acted on within 180 days (hearing within 60 days after the decision). If the Secretary finds a false attestation or broken condition, the Secretary can fine up to $5,000 for each crewman and notify the Attorney General, who may bar the vessel from U.S. ports for up to 1 year. Alaska has special rules: employers must file an attestation usually 30 days before work (24 hours if it was unforeseeable), must try first to hire U.S. longshore workers and hire those available, and follow travel-time and distance rules (no more than one-half hour each way and 5 miles, except Wide Bay and Klawock/Craig: 45 minutes and 7½ miles). The Attorney General may allow crewmen to do longshore work if the vessel’s country and the country of most owners do not prohibit such crewmember work; the Secretary of State keeps a yearly list of countries where such activity is prohibited and set up that list under deadlines after November 29, 1990.
Full Legal Text
Aliens and Nationality — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
8 U.S.C. § 1288
Title 8 — Aliens and Nationality
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73