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Duo bets on
long shot
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By Liz Benston
benston@lasvegassun.com
Las Vegas Sun
December 03, 2006
Long-retired casino dealers Tony Badillo and Jack Lipsman
are preparing for an unfolding labor battle that has
injected new life into an old cause.
A spat between dealers and casino boss Steve Wynn over the
allocation of dealer tips has presented to
their nearly
forgotten
dealers
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Tony
Badillo, left, Jack Lipsman and Al Maurice meet at
Marie Callender’s to talk about organizing Strip
dealers in support of Wynn dealers.
TIFFANY BROWN / LAS VEGAS SUN |
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union - if it can even be called that -
a moment of truth: Do dealers in this town have any
appetite to organize?
Spotting an opportunity to go where no union has succeeded
before, the pair is hoping to organize dealers at Wynn Las
Vegas and potentially elsewhere on the Strip. They say
they want to bring a voice to workers who historically
have been too notoriously independent to let a union speak
on their behalf. The Transport Workers Union tried and
failed a few years ago, and the Culinary Union - which
relies on a friendly partnership with casinos - doesn't
want to upset that relationship by representing dealers.
Badillo and Lipsman's organizing campaign may be a long
shot. But this, after all, is a town built on dreams.
Badillo, 74, created the Nevada Casino Dealers Association
in 1989 on the heels of a legislative threat by casinos to
prevent workers fired without cause to sue their
employers. Rather than operating his organization as a
formal union, Badillo offered behind-the-scenes help to
dealers who were fired or mistreated by bosses. Lipsman,
69, came on board in 1991 after writing an angry letter to
the editor of a local paper on behalf of embattled
dealers. Badillo spotted the letter, contacted Lipsman and
the two have been inseparable ever since.
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|

For
more than fifteen years,
Tony Badillo (seen here) and Jack Lipsman have
quietly advocated for casino dealers and helped
informally settle workplace disputes. Now they
hope to parlay their experience by organizing
dealers. They know it won’t be easy; nobody before
them has succeeded. With a dealer-management
dispute at Wynn Las Vegas, they say it’s now or
never for a dealers’ union.
|
They make an odd pair, distinctively different in their
accents - Badillo's by way of Mexico and Lipsman's from
New York City - but united in their passion to champion
dealers.
Badillo is the impulsive, grudge-holding firebrand,
Lipsman more the calming but unfolding diplomat.
Their reputations as rabble rousers in an industry where
employees are expected to follow militarylike procedure
earned them some respect among their superiors. Rather
than being fired for speaking up during their days on the
clock, they were sometimes consulted by bosses looking to
change casino procedures without riling up the rank and
file.
The shadow union, which has not been recognized by any
casinos nor been officially adopted by any dealers, has
assisted hundreds of dealers whose stories never made the
newspapers.
One dealer claimed to have been fired for moving a
customer's smoldering ashtray away from
her
face.
Another
said
he was
denied |
|
treatment for carpal tunnel syndrome
created by the repetitive motions of dealing cards.
Another claimed she was the victim of sexual harassment
from a superior. A group of dealers at one casino said it
had been fired as part of a plan to replace old-timers
with younger employees, and at another casino, dealers
groused about not getting days off under the Family
Medical Leave Act.
For years the association's phone number has been quietly
circulated like prayer cards throughout the close-knit
dealer community.
The men have written letters to management and poked
around casino floors, interviewing dealers and questioning
supervisors like ad-hoc social workers. For the most part,
the in-your-face strategy has worked. Casinos avoided a
union organizing campaign and more often than not,
supervisors admitted to acting rashly in situations that
were challenged by the two dealer advocates.
"Just being there was sometimes enough," Lipsman said.
"They knew we know a lot of people. We weren't an official
union, but we had enough clout to get the job done."
At its peak in the 1990s, the union boasted several
thousand dues-paying members and a newsletter entitled
"Inside the Pit." It now has but three officers - and a
still-active registration with the secretary of state.
After somewhat of a dry spell, donations of $25 to several
hundred dollars a pop are streaming into their Post Office
box from dealers.
The money supports mailers and other publicity efforts.
Both men get by on their earlier investments in CDs,
mutual funds and stocks. That forward-thinking strategy
wasn't necessarily followed by peers who, unaccustomed to
socking away large chunks of cash, spent lavishly in their
youth and now have no pension to rely on.
Badillo arrived in Las Vegas from Juarez, Mexico, in 1956
and worked as a busboy at the Sands. He hung out at
downtown casinos hoping to learn how to deal blackjack and
was spotted and recruited by a Sands boss. Badillo dealt
to the rich and famous, including Rat Packers Frank
Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr. He retired when the property
closed in 1996 to make way for the Venetian and twice ran
unsuccessfully for the Clark County Commission.
|
|

For
more than fifteen years,
Tony Badillo and Jack Lipsman (seen here) have
quietly advocated for casino dealers and helped
informally settle workplace disputes. Now they
hope to parlay their experience by organizing
dealers. They know it won’t be easy; nobody before
them has succeeded. With a dealer-management
dispute at Wynn Las Vegas, they say it’s now or
never for a dealers’ union. |
Lipsman, who attended college for two years, sold his New
York restaurant and moved to Las Vegas with his family in
1975. He cooked for the Las Vegas Hilton and then went to
dealing school, getting his first jobs downtown. He spent
22 years at the Flamingo Hilton, retiring in 1999.
While Badillo has long argued for a national dealers
union, Lipsman hasn't always been a fan of organized
labor.
Lipsman once believed that some disputes were best solved
informally. Like many dealers, he feared losing his job in
an effort to spearhead an organizing drive.
The recent tip dispute galvanized their belief in a union
as no other scrap has.
When Wynn decided to give dealers' immediate
supervisors a share of dealer tips, the voice-mail
box of the dealers union, renamed the
International Union of Gaming Employees,
began
filling
up with
angry |
|
messages from
dealers willing to challenge the policy.
The battles won and lost over the years have been small
fry compared with the prospect of a union that could help
dealers achieve more job security and a base salary that
rises above minimum wage - a wish list achieved by the
Culinary on behalf of its nearly 60,000 members but has
shown little chance of coming true for the more than
10,000 dealers who work in Las Vegas.
Until now, the men say.
"This is something new," Lipsman said of the current
dispute. "This is where they come in and actually take
your money."
Wynn's move could create a ripple effect involving other
tip-dependent jobs such as valets and cocktail servers,
Badillo said.
"We cannot allow Wynn to go along with this policy," he
said. "This is going to destroy the whole tip system."
Without the attraction of big tips, dealing becomes just
another low-wage, high-turnover job - not much more of a
career than preparing food at McDonald's, Lipsman added.
(Dealers may earn little more than $7 hourly at low-end
casinos but pull in more than $75,000 per year in tips at
a top-drawer Strip casino, making it easier to put up with
overbearing managers and obnoxious customers.)
"I spent a good part of my life (dealing), and I don't
want to see it destroyed," he said.
Wynn Las Vegas executives maintain that sharing tips with
supervisors will encourage better customer service and
attract more people to supervisory positions that
traditionally paid less than what dealers make in tips.
President Andrew Pascal said the property will do all it
can to "lawfully oppose union organizing" among dealers
and, if dealers persist, hold a secret-ballot election.
Unions have favored a "card check" procedure that
encourages sign-ups out of management's view.
"The decision to join or refuse to join a union rests with
employees," he said, although federal law allows the
casino to "campaign against a union organizing drive and
truthfully advise employees regarding the benefits of
remaining union free."
In years past, casino bosses have attempted to keep
workers happy - and unions at bay - by boosting pay and
benefits for workers.
Casinos have long feared a potential strike among dealers,
among their most trained workers, because it could
effectively shut down the Strip.
For now, appetite for a union appears fairly quiet at
other casinos, where dealers don't have a front-burner
issue to rally around like they do at Wynn Las Vegas.
In going after Wynn's dealers, Badillo and Lipsman have no
delusions.
The men helped a short-lived campaign in the early 2000s
by the Transport Workers Union to organize dealers. The
TWU, an industrial trade union attached to the AFL-CIO,
knew little of casinos and after a few small successes,
its effort sputtered and then collapsed.
Dealers have discussed unionizing at other casinos but
"when push came to shove, they wouldn't pull the trigger,"
Lipsman said. "They were afraid for their jobs."
One ex-dealer agrees, and doesn't hold out much hope that
his friends will succeed. "I don't have a lot of faith in
dealers taking it very far," said H. Lee Barnes, a
one-time member of the Casino Dealers Association who
teaches English at the Community College of Southern
Nevada. "Casinos set up dealers in an atmosphere of
competition - they live with a sense of insecurity,"
Barnes said. Dealers are unwilling to jeopardize future
earnings by rallying for a union. Tips and management
issues also vary by property, making it difficult to work
toward common goals, he said.
Teamsters Local 995 claims that in recent weeks, more than
half of Wynn's dealers have expressed interest in joining
the union, which represents a few thousand valets,
switchboard operators and a variety of other casino
workers. The Teamsters has successfully organized smaller
groups not traditionally represented by the Culinary.
Badillo and Lipsman aren't upset that dealers are
bypassing them for an established union. They want to
assist the Teamsters but aren't entirely convinced that it
- or dealers - will go the distance.
With little past success to bolster them, are Badillo and
Lipsman a couple of wannabe union activists tilting at
windmills?
Al Maurice, a Mirage dealer whose son deals at Wynn,
doesn't think so.
"They're very effective, and they've done a lot in the
past," said Maurice, who has dealt blackjack for 35 years.
Still, Wynn dealers "want to see a bigger, more solid
union to go with," he said.
Wynn scoffs at the idea of a dealers union, saying some
people are "trying to start a union in search of someone
to represent."
"About 5 percent of the dealers, maybe 40 of them, are
convinced I picked their pockets," Wynn said this week of
the new tips allocations. "It's an awful hard case to make
that we're abusing anyone. They may be (angry), but they
ain't quitting."
Lipsman concedes that it's time for dealers to put up or
shut up.
"If this isn't enough for them to organize, nothing will
be," he said.
Liz Benston can be reached at 259-4077 or at
benston@lasvegassun.com |
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