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Hotel Contract Talks Falter

Hotel Contract Talks Falter as Union Tries Power Ploy

By Nancy Cleeland Times Staff Writer

Los Angeles Times - June 24, 2004
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-fi-hotels24jun24,1,3423997.story?coll=la-home-local

High-stakes negotiations between Los Angeles-area
hotels and the hotel workers union have broken down, as
national chains like Hyatt and Sheraton resist the
union's novel plan to line up contract expiration dates
across the country, opening the door to a national
strike.

Union leaders, who want contracts in 10 major cities to
expire in 2006, say that kind of clout - and the threat
of a potentially disruptive nationwide walkout in two
years - would allow them to substantially drive up
wages and benefits for housekeepers, bellboys and
banquet servers.

Hotel attorney Ken Ballard said the industry, which is
pulling out of a three-year slump, was not about to
hand over that kind of power.

"It's very unclear to us what the union's agenda would
be, how moderate or reasonable they would be," said
Ballard, who represents the Los Angeles Hotel
Employers' Council in negotiations. "It would be a very
difficult situation."

New York, Boston and Chicago are already in line. Los
Angeles would be the fourth city with a 2006 contract
expiration. And in the next three months, contracts in
San Francisco and Washington will be open for
negotiations.

The national strategy was mapped out by John Wilhelm,
president of the Hotel Employees and Restaurant
Employees International Union, or HERE, and one of five
union presidents pushing for fundamental changes in the
labor movement. The group advocates a national approach
to negotiations.

Currently, each union local makes deals separately with
hotels in its area, an approach that Wilhelm said no
longer made sense after waves of consolidation in the
industry.

The hotel council contract covers nine major hotels. An
additional eight hotels are covered under separate
contracts that are likely to follow the council's
agreement closely.

Together, the 17 union hotels include some of the
area's most prestigious, including the Hyatt Regency,
Millennium Biltmore and Westin Bonaventure in downtown
Los Angeles, the Westin Century Plaza and the Sheraton
Universal. They employ about 4,000 union housekeepers,
bellhops, banquet servers and others.

The Los Angeles contract expired June 1 after several
months of extensions. Without a contract, the union
could strike or the hotels could lock out union
workers. Neither side has ruled out those
possibilities, but no plans appear to be imminent.

After three months of slow negotiations, the issue of
the expiration date came to a head this week. The union
is seeking a two-year pact so that it will expire in
2006.

On Monday, union leaders said they would put the
hotels' latest offer - which provides moderate wage and
pension increases under a five-year contract - to a
membership vote July 1. They expect members to solidly
reject it, sending a message to the hotel council that
it will lose the fight on the expiration date.

Late Tuesday, the hotels came back with a move of their
own: They declared that negotiations had reached an
impasse, meaning that talks are over until the union
gives in on its 2006 expiration demand.

"We hope at some point the union sits down and says
let's negotiate a contract that does not expire in two
years," Ballard said. "Until then, we're at impasse."

What happens next is unclear. Union negotiators say
there is no real impasse because they are still willing
to discuss all parts of the contract. Maria Elena
Durazo, president of HERE Local 11, said the union
might file a legal challenge to the hotel council's
declaration.

If negotiations are truly at an impasse, which would be
determined by the National Labor Relations Board, the
hotels would be able to impose terms of the contract
they last offered. Under that scenario, the balance of
power could tilt slightly toward the hotel council.

On the other hand, a strong rejection of the current
contract offer by union members could shift power back
toward them. And the clock is ticking in other cities.
The San Francisco contract expires in August, the
Washington pact in September.

The hotel offer, for the first time, requires workers
to contribute to health insurance, at $10 a week.

"We have made a good, fair and equitable offer to Local
11 that would immediately benefit our employees in many
ways," Ballard said.

But Durazo called the insurance co-payment a step
backward and said it would more than wipe out raises.
She said hotel negotiators had refused to address a
major concern of housekeepers: workloads that she said
required some to skip lunch breaks.

Durazo said she expected members to strongly reject the
offer, showing that they are willing to risk losing the
wage increase to fight for a longer-term national
strategy.

The failure of the United Food and Commercial Workers
union to win its local fight against national
supermarket chains this year showed why a national
approach was needed, Durazo said.

"Watching the UFCW strike absolutely struck a chord
with our members," she said. "It was a lesson on how
much money these corporations can lose to fight a group
of local workers."

======

Union hotels

Los Angeles-area hotels with workers represented by the
Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International
Union:

*  Crystal Park Casino Hotel, Compton

*  Fairmont Miramar, Santa Monica

*  Furama Hotel, Westchester

*  Holiday Inn, downtown Los Angeles

*  Hotel Bel-Air

*  Hyatt Regency, downtown Los Angeles

*  Millennium Biltmore, downtown Los Angeles

*  Radisson Wilshire Plaza

*  Renaissance Hollywood

*  Sheraton Universal, Universal City

*  Sportsmen's Lodge, Studio City

*  St. Regis, Century City

*  Vagabond Motor Inn, downtown Los Angeles

*  Westin Bonaventure, downtown Los Angeles

*  Westin Century Plaza, Century City

*  W Hotel, Westwood

*  Wilshire Grand, downtown Los Angeles

Source: Times staff

Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times


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CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
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Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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