Current:Home > StocksDaily room cleanings underscores Las Vegas hotel workers contract fight for job safety and security -SovereignWealth
Daily room cleanings underscores Las Vegas hotel workers contract fight for job safety and security
View
Date:2025-04-19 18:24:33
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Over seven months of tense negotiations, mandatory daily room cleanings underscored the big issues that Las Vegas union hotel workers were fighting to address in their first contracts since the pandemic: job security, better working conditions and safety while on the job.
From the onset of bargaining, Ted Pappageorge, the chief contract negotiator for the Culinary Workers Union, had said tens of thousands of workers whose contracts expired earlier this year would be willing to go on strike to make daily room cleanings mandatory.
“Las Vegas needs to be full service,” he said last month.
It was a message that Pappageorge and the workers would repeat for months as negotiations ramped up and the union threatened to go on strike if they didn’t have contracts by first light on Friday with MGM Resorts International, Caesars Entertainment and Wynn Resorts.
But by dawn Thursday, after a combined 40 hours of negotiations, the union had secured tentative labor deals with MGM Resorts and Caesars, narrowly averting a sweeping strike at 18 hotel-casinos along the Strip.
The threat of a strike on a much smaller scale still loomed while negotiations were underway Thursday evening with Wynn Resorts. But a walkout wasn’t likely given the tentative deals already reached with the Strip’s two largest employers.
Terms of the deals weren’t immediately released, but the union said in a statement the proposed five-year contracts will provide workers with historic wage increases, reduced workloads and other unprecedented wins — including mandated daily room cleanings.
Before the pandemic, daily room cleanings were routine. Hotel guests could expect fresh bedsheets and new towels by dinnertime if a “Do Not Disturb” sign wasn’t hanging on their hotel room doors.
But as social distancing became commonplace in 2020, hotels began to cut back on room cleanings.
More than three years later, the once industry-wide standard has yet to make a full comeback. Some companies say it’s because there are environmental benefits to offering fewer room cleanings, like saving water.
MGM Resorts and Caesars didn’t respond Thursday to emailed requests for comment about the issue. Pappageorge said this week that, even as negotiations came down to the wire ahead of the union’s plans to strike, the union and casino companies were the “farthest apart” on the issue.
A spokesman for Wynn Resorts said they already offer daily room cleanings and did not cut back on that service during the pandemic.
Without mandatory daily room cleanings, Pappageorge has said, “the jobs of tens of thousands of workers are in jeopardy of cutbacks and reduction.”
It’s a fear that Las Vegas hotel workers across the board shared in interviews with The Associated Press since negotiations began in April — from the porters and kitchen staff who work behind the scenes to keep the Strip’s hotel-casinos running, to the cocktail servers and bellman who provide customers with the hospitality that has helped make the city famous.
During the pandemic, the hospitality industry learned how to “do more with less,” said David Edelblute, a Las Vegas-based attorney and lobbyist whose corporate clients include gaming and hospitality companies.
And that combination, he said, could be “pretty catastrophic” for the labor force.
Rory Kuykendall, a bellman at Flamingo Las Vegas, said in September after voting to authorize a strike that he wanted stronger job protection against the inevitable advancements in technology to be written into their new union contract.
“We want to make sure that we, as the workers, have a voice and a say in any new technology that is introduced at these casinos,” he said.
That includes technology already at play at some resorts: mobile check-in, automated valet tickets and robot bartenders.
Pappageorge, who led the negotiating teams that secured tentative deals this week with the casino giants, said a cut in daily room cleanings also poses health and safety concerns for the housekeepers who still had to reach a daily room quota.
Jennifer Black, a guest room attendant at Flamingo Las Vegas, described her first job in the hospitality sector as “back-breaking.”
A typical day on the job, she said, requires her to clean 13 rooms after guests have checked out. Each room takes between 30-45 minutes to clean, but rooms that haven’t been cleaned for a few days, she said, take more time to turn over.
“We’re working through our lunch breaks to make it,” she said. “Our workload is far too much.”
veryGood! (19934)
Related
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Study: Microgrids Could Reduce California Power Shutoffs—to a Point
- Climate Activists Protest the Museum of Modern Art’s Fossil Fuel Donors Outside Its Biggest Fundraising Gala
- Vying for a Second Term, Can Biden Repair His Damaged Climate and Environmental Justice Image?
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- In the Florida Panhandle, a Black Community’s Progress Is Threatened by a Proposed Liquified Natural Gas Plant
- Q&A: Kate Beaton Describes the Toll Taken by Alberta’s Oil Sands on Wildlife and the Workers Who Mine the Viscous Crude
- Khloe Kardashian Films Baby Boy Tatum’s Milestone Ahead of First Birthday
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Can Iceberg Surges in the Arctic Trigger Rapid Warming at the Other End of The World?
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Environmental Justice Advocates Urge California to Stop Issuing New Drilling Permits in Neighborhoods
- Reliving Every Detail of Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck's Double Wedding
- Ariana Grande Spotted Without Wedding Ring at Wimbledon 2023 Amid Dalton Gomez Breakup
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Gigi Hadid Released After Being Arrested for Marijuana in Cayman Islands
- Advocates from Across the Country Rally in Chicago for Coal Ash Rule Reform
- Country’s Largest Grid Operator Must Process and Connect Backlogged Clean Energy Projects, a New Report Says
Recommendation
Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
As Youngkin Tries to Pull Virginia Out of RGGI, Experts Warn of Looming Consequences for Low-Income Residents and Threatened Communities
Bumble and Bumble 2 for the Price of 1 Deal: Get Frizz-Free, Soft, Vibrant Hair for Just $31
At Lake Powell, Record Low Water Levels Reveal an ‘Amazing Silver Lining’
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
Pregnant Kourtney Kardashian Says Bye Bye to Haters While Blocking Negative Accounts
Arizona Announces Phoenix Area Can’t Grow Further on Groundwater
Colorado Frackers Doubled Freshwater Use During Megadrought, Even as Drilling and Oil Production Fell