But that belies the seriousness of a dispute which threatens to shut down the port for another four days from the end of this week, unless scheduled talks before a mediator tomorrow achieve enough progress towards a new collective employment agreement.
Union president Garry Parsloe said last night there would be a large gathering outside the port this morning, which would be swelled by representatives of other unions before a march to a meeting in Anzac Ave at 11am to decide their next moves.
He expected tomorrow's talks could proceed regardless, but today's meeting would give his members a chance to review the dispute and decide whether there should be more industrial action if mediation failed.
In the meantime, notices remain of a 48-hour strike from Thursday night to be followed by another company lockout of equal duration from late on Saturday.
The port company says it has offered to roll over an expired collective agreement with unchanged conditions and a 2.5 per cent pay rise, but the unionists remain upset a number of jobs were contracted out during the term of the previous document.
A union official not involved in the negotiations has meanwhile been banned from entering the port for two years under a trespass notice, after the company said it received a report accusing him of inciting workers to use force to block the path of non-unionists.
Mr Parsloe said the union was investigating the allegation, but the fact remained that no force had been used during the strikes and what is the first lockout at the port since the infamous 191-day stoppage of 1951.