Workers at major hotels in Southern California set to strike over holiday weekend- DAY THREE

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Picket signs are stacked in preparation for a strike Saturday morning at 65 major hotels in Los Angeles and Orange counties in Southern California.

New YorkCNN —
A union representing 15,000 workers at 65 major hotels in Los Angeles and Orange counties are set to go on strike early Saturday in a push for significantly improved wages.

The current labor contract expires at 12:01 am PDT Saturday. Among the hotels that set to be struck either overnight or early Saturday are the Ritz-Carlton, JW Marriott LA Live, Beverly Hilton, Fairmont Miramar, Anaheim Hilton, and Four Seasons Regent Beverly Wilshire, the setting for the movie “Pretty Woman.”

A person familiar with management plans said the hotels expect to stay open even if there is a strike, using management staff from the struck hotels and from other nonunion properties to fill in. They are also expecting many of the strikers to return to work on Monday, when they will be eligible for a holiday pay premium, and for the union to then stage spot strikes at different hotels going forward.

In 2023, hotel profits in Los Angeles and Orange County exceeded pre-pandemic levels according to Unite Here Local 11, the union representing the workers. But the union said hospitality workers continue to struggle to afford a place to live in the cities where they work. The union said in a survey of members, 53% said that they either have moved in the past five years or will move in the near future because of soaring housing costs.

Hotel workers priced out of LA​

“Hotel workers who work in the booming Los Angeles’ tourism industry must be able to live in Los Angeles,” said union Co-President Kurt Petersen. He said the 96% support in favor a strike in a vote earlier this month “sends a clear message to the industry that workers have reached their limit and are prepared to strike to secure a living wage.”

The union said workers are paid between $20 to $25 an hour and the union is demanding an immediate $5 an hour wage increase, which would represent an immediate 20% to 25% raise. It also wants $3 an hour wage increases in subsequent years of the contract, as well as improved health care and retirement benefits.

One hotel, the Westin Bonaventure hotel, has already reached a tentative labor deal with the union and will not be struck. But there is a management group, the Coordinated Bargaining Group, which is negotiating on behalf of 44 of the 65 unionized hotels which are due to be struck on Saturday. The other 21 hotels basically follow the contracts that are reached at the other 44 hotels.

Management said it had offered a $2.50 an hour raise, which would represent a 10% wage increase for most workers, and a total of $6.25 an hour more over the four years of the proposed contract.

Short-term strikes​

“If there is a strike, it will occur because the union is determined to have one,” said management. “The hotels want to continue to provide strong wages, affordable quality family healthcare and a pension. The Union should accept our offer to return to the bargaining table immediately and work with us to reach agreement on a new contract that would benefit our employees and the City and County of Los Angeles and Orange County.”

Short-term strikes, rather than open-ended strikes that continue until a labor dispute is concluded, are an increasing common tactic being used by unions. With lower-paid workers who might not be able to miss working and being paid for an extended period, the limited-duration strikes can be effective. The union would not confirm plans to have strikers return to work on Monday.

“Workers are ready to strike until they get what they are asking for,” said union spokesperson Maria Hernandez.

Besides the increased bookings that might come from this being a four-day holiday weekend, the strike comes at a time of a major convention being held in the city, the Los Angeles Anime Expo, which is already sold out.




 

Thousands of Southern California hotel workers begin strike

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Hotels workers walk a picket line on Sunday, July 2, 2023 in Los Angeles, CA. Thousands of workers at hotels across Southern California walked off the job early Sunday demanding higher pay and better benefits, beginning what could be the largest U.S. hotel workers’ strike in recent memory.

Just as the July Fourth holiday weekend gets into high gear, thousands of hotel workers in Southern California began striking Sunday morning seeking to negotiate a contract with higher wages and other benefits, according to the union representing the workers.

Members of UNITE HERE Local 11, which says it represents more than 32,000 hospitality workers in Southern California and Arizona, are striking at more than a dozen hotels throughout Los Angeles and Santa Monica after their contract expired just after midnight, according to posts on the union’s Twitter page.

Participants include cooks, dishwashers, servers, front desk workers and room attendants, the union said in a news release. A union representative said Friday that the contract covered about 15,000 workers at 65 hotels.

The union’s key demands include a $5-an-hour wage increase, access to affordable family health care benefits and stronger workplace protections.

A spokesperson for the union could not immediately be reached Sunday to offer more specific details.

Negotiations began April 20, the local said. Last month, 96% of UNITE HERE Local 11 members voted to authorize the strike.

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The union also says that while hotels received billions in federal bailouts during the pandemic and have since bounced back and exceeded pre-pandemic profits, wages have not kept up with rising housing costs. Affordable housing advocates have said skyrocketing rents are fueling homelessness throughout California, where nearly 1 million fewer affordable rental homes are available for extremely low-income renters, according to the National Low Income Housing Coalition.

The union has also said plans for Los Angeles to host the soccer World Cup in 2026 and the Summer Olympics in 2028 could worsen the housing crisis.

In a statement, Kurt Petersen, a co-president of UNITE HERE Local 11, said it was “shameful” that “the hotel negotiators decided to take a four-day holiday instead of negotiating.”

The Hotel Association of Los Angeles said in a statement Thursday that hotel management representatives had been “actively engaged in good faith collective bargaining” with the union.

“The hotel community will continue to provide excellent service in welcoming guests to the Los Angeles area as we always do,” it added.

And attorneys Keith Grossman and Ken Ballard said in a statement released Friday on behalf of the Coordinated Bargaining Group — the 44 Los Angeles County and Orange County hotels involved in the negotiations — that the union “has shown no desire to engage in productive, good faith negotiations with this group.”

The statement also said the Coordinated Bargaining Group proposed wage increases of $2.50 per hour in the first year, rising to a $6.25 hourly increase over the next four years.

The strike comes days after the Westin Bonaventure, the city’s biggest hotel, came to an agreement affecting its 600 workers, who will receive increased wages and pension contributions, among other benefits, the union said.

It is also happening during the Anime Expo, a four-day event focused on Japanese pop culture taking place at the Los Angeles Convention Center that attracts 100,000 people from around the world, the Los Angeles Times reported.

The strike also comes amid the ongoing Hollywood writers’ strike. And the Screen Actors Guild, which represents some of Hollywood’s biggest stars, agreed to extend its contract negotiations with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers to July 12 to avert a strike.



 
Nyc union hotel employees reading article: 20-25 dollars that’s it.. shitttt security guards making more than that starting lol.. sucks to be you guys
 
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