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Tip-sharing cloud forming over Encore,
Wynn critics say
By Liz
Benston
Thu, Aug. 07, 2008
(2 a.m.)
For more than
three decades, Steve Wynn has had a
reputation as an inspiring casino boss
who publicly praises his employees and
assures them that a single job well done
can “change the course of the whole
enterprise.”
He is known for paying his employees
well and negotiating amicably with
unions. And he creates luxurious resorts
where workers aspire to find employment.
And yet as he prepares to staff his new
Encore, Wynn’s reputation, at least
among casino dealers, is still suffering
nearly two years after he instituted a
policy at Wynn Las Vegas that requires
dealers share their tips with
supervisors.
That controversial policy — which is
being challenged in court and is the
subject of a pending complaint with the
state labor commissioner — touched off a
union organizing campaign along the
Strip among dealers who feared the
spread of similar policies. Dealers at
Wynn Las Vegas and Caesars Palace voted
for the union, but dealers at the Rio
voted down the Transport Workers Union
last month.
Some dealers said the dispute has
tarnished Wynn’s image among tipped
workers, many of whom will be reluctant
to give up stable jobs to apply at
Encore, a $2.3 billion resort that is to
open next to Wynn Las Vegas by the end
of the year.
Wynn said Encore will have a tip-sharing
policy similar to its sister property
and that workers will be satisfied
knowing that upfront.
But dealers said the policy will keep
away some potential Encore employees.
“I can’t see any experienced dealer
working in a decent casino giving up
what they have to go over to Encore,”
said Al Maurice, a dealer at Mirage who
assisted the union campaign at Wynn Las
Vegas. “I believe he will have to settle
for a lot of inexperienced help straight
out of dealers school or from minor
casinos.”
“His reputation is mud right now,” added
a Rio dealer who requested anonymity.
“But if you’re only making $80 a day at
a downtown property and you can make at
least $150 a day at Encore, you’re going
to take that job.”
Wynn dismissed such criticism, saying
dealers have “calmed down” since the
union vote.
“We’ve never had a better culture,” he
said. “The attitude of our staff is
absolutely delicious.”
Wynn also said dealers behaved like
“angels” by not letting the tip dispute
affect their job performance.
“It caused a problem and I apologize.
But we’ve told them we’re going to stick
to our program.”
Wynn said the policy has improved
customer service by giving supervisors
more incentive to engage with customers
and has increased the job pool for
supervisory positions.
Critics say the policy has unlawfully
enriched supervisors, saving the company
on salaries by giving managers some of
the money traditionally earned by
dealers.
About 32 percent of Encore’s workforce
will be transfers from Wynn Las Vegas
who will help train newcomers in the
company’s culture and business
practices. Recruiters with clipboards
roam employee areas at Wynn Las Vegas,
encouraging workers to ask about jobs at
Encore. Posters rally workers to seek
their “dream” job next door.
Wynn dealers, however, are barred from
taking jobs at Encore. The company says
offering jobs for Wynn dealers next door
while the union is negotiating a
contract for dealers could be considered
an inducement to leave the property and
therefore a violation of federal labor
law. The union disagrees.
Despite all this, and, as expected in
this depressed job market, Wynn Resorts
has been deluged with job applications.
Encore had received 24,000 by the third
day of hiring, which began last month on
the Web site wynnjobs.com. Nearly 60
percent of those applications, Wynn
said, came during the first 30 hours.
Encore will have about 5,300 employees.
Wynn said many of the applicants will
likely be out-of-towners or unemployed
because people with jobs are afraid to
risk accepting a new job with a
probationary period.
His critics say that’s a departure from
the opening of Wynn Las Vegas, for which
dealer supervisors left top jobs at
other properties with the expectation
they would be the highest-paid dealers
on the Strip.
To lure applicants to Encore, Wynn
Resorts has run local radio ads in which
Wynn refers to his employees as company
“treasures” and hired skywriters to
publicize the company’s employment Web
site over Southern California.
During a conference call with investors
last month, Wynn said his primary
concern isn’t the economic downturn that
has so many other casino executives
sweating, but rather the important task
of finding the best applicants for
Encore.
“This period we’re in is really key. ...
This is one of the great creative
moments,” he said, referring to the
hiring process. “If we can get happy
souls that really like each other ... we
will prevail in the future in any
economic environment.”
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