A
campaign
to
organize
MGM
Mirage
security
guards
has
turned
ugly,
with the
union’s
lead
organizer
comparing
casino
executives
to
terrorists
and
threatening
to bring
homeless
people
and
prostitutes
to the
picket
line to
make
things
unpleasant
for the
company’s
customers.
The
hardball
tactics
come as
no
surprise
to
anyone
who
knows
the
organizer,
Steve
Maritas.
He was
convicted
in San
Diego of
stalking
his
former
girlfriend,
who he
says
tricked
him into
violating
a court
order to
keep his
distance.
And he
says he
learned
a lot
about
the
union
business
from his
father,
a former
president
of a
30,000-member
carpenters
district
council
in New
York
City who
was
indicted
on
racketeering
charges.
Maritas’
efforts
to
organize
guards
has
evoked a
bit of a
grin
among
MGM
Mirage
executives
because
they
think
his
hard-charging
tactics
are so
over-the-top
for Las
Vegas
that
he’ll
discredit
himself
among
the very
guards
he is
trying
to
enlist.
MGM
Mirage
is
telling
employees
at
mandatory
meetings
that the
best
relationship
between
labor
and
management
is a
direct
one that
doesn’t
involve
a
third-party
union,
and is
calling
Maritas’
tactics
“strikingly
offensive.”
Maritas
says his
tactics,
on
behalf
of the
International
Union of
Security,
Police
and Fire
Professionals
of
America,
are
appropriate
and that
management
“only
understands
one
thing:
disrupting
their
business.”
He
acknowledges
that his
self-described
street
tactics
backfired
in Las
Vegas
when he
put a
picture
of Osama
bin
Laden
next to
a
picture
of
Mandalay
Bay
President
Bill
Hornbuckle
on the
union’s
Web
site.
“They’re
both
terrorists,”
he told
the Sun.
Maritas
also
highlighted
MGM
Mirage’s
partnership
with
Dubai
World,
the
Persian
Gulf
holding
company
— and
linked
it to
the war
in Iraq,
complete
with a
counter
of
American
war
dead.
“It was
no
disrespect,”
he said.
“The
whole
point is
that
Americans
are
dying in
Iraq for
our
freedom
and (MGM
Mirage)
won’t
let our
guys
have
their
freedom
to join
a
union.”
Security
guards,
some of
whom
served
in the
military,
were
outraged
and told
Maritas
to take
the
pictures
down and
apologize,
which he
did.
“Maybe
it was a
low
move,”
Maritas
said.
“But
that’s
the way
(labor)
war is
... I’m
from the
street.
If I
have to
get down
and
dirty,
I’ll do
it.”
He
contended
that the
guards’
initial
disgust
triggered
solidarity
among
the
bargaining
unit and
that
employees
have
begun
taking
ownership
of the
organizing
effort.
Maritas
says his
tactics
are born
out of
frustration.
Although
he’s
been
collecting
union
cards at
casinos
up and
down the
Strip,
his
flagship
campaign
against
MGM
Mirage
has
stalled.
Days
before a
union
election
at the
Luxor
last
month,
the
union
filed an
unfair
labor
practice
charge
with the
National
Labor
Relations
Board,
alleging
management
had
threatened
to
withhold
scheduled
pay
raises
and
other
benefits
if
workers
vote for
the
union.
The
election
at the
property
is on
hold
while
the
federal
labor
board
investigates
the
charge.
Then,
when the
union
filed
for an
election
at
Mandalay
Bay, MGM
Mirage
challenged
the size
of the
bargaining
unit,
seeking
to
exclude
a
quarter
of the
union’s
300
targeted
security
officers.
The
labor
board
has yet
to make
a
decision
or set
an
election
date.
“Getting
the
cards is
the easy
part.
But you
file for
an
election
and look
at what
happens,”
Maritas
said.
“You
can’t
beat
them at
their
own
game.
You
can’t
take
them on
head to
head.
The only
way you
can take
them on
is in
the
street.”
The
union
has
dubbed
security
guards
at
Mandalay
Bay the
“300
Spartans”
(the
sacrificial
army in
Greek
history)
and
plans a
massive
protest
outside
the
property
and
other
MGM
Mirage
casinos
Memorial
Day
weekend
—
complete
with a
busload
of
homeless
people,
“the
smellier
the
better,”
Maritas
said.
“Ten
dollars
a head.
I’ve
done it
on many
occasions.”
He said
he may
deliver
prostitutes
to the
scene,
too.
Maritas’
efforts
to hold
organizing
elections
goes
against
the
grain of
unions
such as
the
Service
Employees
International
Union
and
Unite
Here,
which
work
outside
the
federal
election
system.
Instead,
they
make
certain
concessions
to
management
in
exchange
for its
neutrality
so they
can
organize
through
less
contentious
card
checks.
And
labor
experts
say the
security
guards
union in
Las
Vegas,
by
paying
people
to
picket,
risk
sending
a
message
of weak
support
to MGM
Mirage
and the
public.
None of
this
concerns
Maritas,
though.
“They
threw me
in the
corner.
Now I
got 300
guys I
have to
protect,”
he said.
“We’re
strong.
We’re
going
after
them.
We’re
going to
do
whatever
it
takes.”
He said
he
learned
those
tactics
in part
from his
father,
Theodore
Maritas,
who
headed
the New
York
District
Council
of
Carpenters.
Theodore,
along
with a
cadre of
mobsters,
was
indicted
in 1981
on
racketeering
charges.
He
reportedly
disobeyed
mob
orders
and
refused
to plead
guilty.
The
trial
ended in
a hung
jury,
but
before
Theodore
could be
retried,
he
disappeared.
“He was
never
convicted
of
anything,”
Maritas
said. “I
can’t
change
my past,
who I am
and what
I was
born
into.
I’m
proud of
who I
am, what
my
father
stood
for, and
I’ll
defend
that
until
the day
I die.”
[up]