Union
Set to Begin Boycott of L.A. Hotels
Los Angeles Times - October 21, 2004
By Nancy Cleeland
The
union representing hotel housekeepers, bellmen, waiters and
other hourly workers is moving toward an official boycott
of nine upscale Los Angeles-area hotels, after six months
of negotiations have failed to move either side on key contract
issues.
Leaders
of the union, Unite Here Local 11, are set to announce today
that they are gathering signatures from rank-and-file members
to approve a boycott. Given the strong membership backing
for strike authorization in a recent union election, they
were confident that members would approve a boycott and that
it would be in full swing by early November, said union spokeswoman
Hilda Delgado. Details of the boycott would be announced then,
union officials said.
Matt
Wakefield, an attorney for the Los Angeles Hotel Employers
Council, which represents the nine hotels, has long accused
the union of driving business away, and said a boycott announcement
would acknowledge that strategy.
"They're
just coming out of the closet on it now," he said.
Union
organizers began contacting regular customers of the hotels
months ago to advise them of the labor dispute but said they
were not pushing people to cancel reservations. Nevertheless,
some groups did bow out of planned banquets and luncheons.
The union now says that such cancellations have cost the hotels
about $1 million in lost revenue - a figure managers say is
high.
In
a posting to employees on its website last week, the council
blasted the union's strategy, saying it hurt rank-and-file
members by sending business to nonunion hotels and thus cutting
work hours and tips.
"Although
the union seems to be very proud of itself, thinking that
it is 'putting pressure' on the council hotels, this tactic
makes no sense to us," the posting said.
The
central contract issue is the expiration date. National leaders
of Unite Here want to line up local contracts across the country
so that they all expire in 2006, giving each local more power
at the bargaining table.
The
nine Los Angeles hotels are the Westin Bonaventure, Wilshire
Grand, Millennium Biltmore, Sheraton Universal, Hyatt Regency
Los Angeles, Hyatt West Hollywood, St. Regis, Westin Century
Plaza and Regent Beverly Wilshire.
More
News About the Los Angeles Hotel Workers' Struggle for a Fair
Contract >>
|