Skip to content
Greg Mitre, president of ILWU Pensioners, left, and Ramon Ponce De Leon, president of ILWU Local 13, speak at the annual First Blood memorial ceremony for fallen workers. (Photo by Roy San Filippo)
Greg Mitre, president of ILWU Pensioners, left, and Ramon Ponce De Leon, president of ILWU Local 13, speak at the annual First Blood memorial ceremony for fallen workers. (Photo by Roy San Filippo)
TORRANCE - 11/07/2012 - (Staff Photo: Scott Varley/LANG) Donna Littlejohn
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

About 200 people gathered in San Pedro on Sunday, May 15, to honor dockworkers who have died on the job at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach since the longshore union’s founding in the 1930s.

This year’s International Longshore and Warehouse Union “First Blood” memorial ceremony recognized Chulaih Ang, 64, of Carson, who was fatally struck by a vehicle near a container terminal at the Port of Long Beach earlier this year. He was the most-recent worker killed on the job and became the 70th name on a memorial plaque honoring those who have died.

The vehicle his Ang in mid-afternoon on Jan. 15 in the 300 block of Mediterranean Way.

Greg Mitre, president of the ILWU’s Pensioners, which sponsors the ceremony each year, and Ramon Ponce De Leon, president of ILWU’s Local 13, led the service at the bust of Harry Bridges in the greenbelt along Harbor Boulevard. Bridges is the union’s founder.

The greenbelt also includes the memorial plaque.

Among those who attended the ceremony were 22 family members of Jose Santoyo, a union mechanic who was killed in 2019.

Sign up for The Localist, our daily email newsletter with handpicked stories relevant to where you live. Subscribe here.