Hotel, union negotiation fails to break stalemate; more walkouts ahead, union vows
Tensions rose Tuesday between the Southern California hotel operators and their striking workers during the first bargaining session since intermittent walkouts began July 1. Hotel representatives accused the union of failing to bargain in good faith, and Unite Here Local 11 vowed more strikes at hotels across Los Angeles and Orange counties.
Meanwhile, the labor unrest has cost targeted hotels some major business.
A hotel industry group introduced a new contract proposal during negotiations at the Westin Bonaventure Hotel & Suites in downtown Los Angeles, the only hotel that has reached a deal so far and avoided strikes among the more than 60 targeted hotel sites within the Unite Here Local 11 membership area in Southern California.
Keith Grossman, an attorney representing a coalition of 44 Southern California hotels, said that the proposal represented an improved wage offer, but it was rejected by the union.
“The union made no counteroffer. We are extremely disappointed that Local 11 refuses to bargain in good faith,” Grossman said in a statement. “Local 11 continues to signal that it is more interested in its political agenda than negotiating to reach an agreement.”
But Kurt Petersen, co-president of Unite Here Local 11, said that the new wage proposal “moved backwards” and that hotel representatives “walked out” of the bargaining session.
Sweating workers across multiple industries in the Los Angeles area hit the (hot) pavement in continuing protest actions.
The session ended abruptly, Petersen said, after the union put forth a new proposal that requires employers to offer permanent jobs to replacement workers brought in during the strike. Unite 11 has accused hotels such as the Laguna Cliffs Marriott Resort & Spa and Fairfield Inn & Suites in El Segundo of failing to hire Black workers as full-time employees while bringing in Black workers as replacement labor.
Contracts covering some 15,000 hotel workers expired on June 30. The union mounted a brief strike during the Fourth of July holiday weekend in downtown Los Angeles, followed by others near Los Angeles International Airport and Disneyland last week.
The union isn’t staging labor actions at all hotels simultaneously, instead pursuing a strategy of rolling walkouts. And more are on the way, Petersen said.
“Strikes can happen anytime, anyplace. And I suspect that we will be walking out very, very shortly,” he said.
Workers are picketing for higher wages and better benefits and working conditions. The union says hotel employees are forced into long commutes because their pay hasn’t kept pace with soaring housing costs.
These hotel housekeepers are commuting long hours to their jobs in L.A. to afford houses they can one day pass down to their children.
Previously, union leadership has called on other hotels to sign on with the Westin agreement. The hotel coalition has filed an unfair labor practice charge at the National Labor Relations Board, accusing Unite Here Local 11 of bargaining in bad faith by striking over “nonmandatory subjects” that aren’t related to wages and benefits. This includes a measure set for the 2024 ballot that would require hotels in Los Angeles to rent vacant rooms to unhoused people.
Under the tentative deal with Westin Bonaventure, workers will receive higher wages, affordable health insurance at less than $20 per month and increases in pension contributions. The agreement also guarantees a restoration of staffing to pre-pandemic levels so that daily room cleanings can become routine again. Workers who are not currently part of a union would have an opportunity to join unions without intimidation. The tentative agreement removes barriers for those who are formerly incarcerated to get hotel jobs and bans E-Verify for applicants so that workers will not be discriminated against because of their immigration status.
The negotiations come at a crucial time in Los Angeles’ ”hot labor summer,” with simultaneous strikes from hotel workers, screenwriters and actors, with some people participating in more than one movement.
Tye Justis is one of those. Justis is a front desk assistant at the Viceroy Santa Monica. He is also a home healthcare worker to make ends meet as he auditions for acting jobs. After participating in the Fourth of July walkouts for the Viceroy, he is now picketing at Fox Studios in Century City.
“We can all strike in solidarity because we’re all fighting for the same thing,” Justis said. At the Viceroy, he is fighting for proper staffing. As positions were cut during the pandemic, he said, this overwhelmed front desk assistants with a higher workload without higher pay.
Hotel workers in Los Angeles and Orange counties voted to authorize a strike during the height of tourism season if talks don’t result in a new contract.
Petersen said that the union is reaching out to meeting organizers asking them to move their gatherings out of Los Angeles because the union can’t “guarantee labor peace.”
The Democratic Governors Assn. is planning to move a conference scheduled for Monday, he said, to the Westin Bonaventure from the Beverly Hilton, which hasn’t signed a new contract. The Japanese American Citizens League National Convention, which runs from July 19 to July 23, has moved to the Westin Bonaventure from DoubleTree by Hilton, another hotel on the union strike list.
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