Culinary loath to represent workers at possibly doomed hotel
By
Michael
Mishak
Wed, Jun
18, 2008
(2 a.m.)
Maids at
Imperial
Palace
are fed
up — and
it’s not
just
because
they say
they’re
being
worked a
lot
harder
than
other
housekeepers
on the
Strip.
They’re
angry at
the
Culinary
Union
for not
coming
to the
rescue
by
organizing
them.
The
Culinary,
they
say,
could
protect
them
from
having
to clean
18 to 22
rooms a
day;
maids
represented
by the
union
clean an
average
of 16.
If ever
there
were
easy
pickings
for a
union
organizing
drive,
they
would be
the
housekeepers
at
Imperial
Palace,
it
seems.
And they
hoped
help
would be
coming
when
they sat
down
with a
Culinary
organizer
last
month,
delivering
a
petition
with 100
signatures.
They
complained
of poor
work
conditions
and
having
to work
through
their
breaks
and
lunch
hours to
complete
their
quotas
of
cleaned
rooms.
The
pressure
has
caused
several
maids to
faint
and sent
some to
the
hospital,
and
supervisors
don’t
care,
they
claim.
Maids
say they
even
staged a
small
walkout
to
protest
the
conditions.
Management
concedes
the
maids
may have
some
grounds
to
complain.
A
spokeswoman
for the
owner of
Imperial
Palace,
Harrah’s
Entertainment,
said
that on
Sunday,
some
maids
cleaned
as many
as 20
rooms
because
many
workers
had
called
out. The
workload,
she
said,
was an
anomaly.
Nevertheless,
the
company
is
hiring
more
full-time
maids
“to
bring
the
ratio
back to
normal,”
spokeswoman
Marybel
Batjer
said.
But that
hasn’t
stopped
the
maids’
campaign
to bring
in the
Culinary.
They
said
they
followed
the
union’s
instructions
when it
asked
for more
letters
about
work
conditions.
The
Culinary
then
asked
them to
compile
a list
of
management
names,
they
said.
But the
maids
feel
they’re
just
being
strung
along.
“It’s
sad when
you have
people
who want
their
help,
willing
to pay
union
dues,
and the
union
doesn’t
want to
hear
anything,”
said one
maid,
who
spoke
anonymously
because
of fear
of
management
reprisal.
Indeed,
the
Culinary
is
making
no noise
about
organizing
the
maids,
which
seems
counterintuitive
because
it
represents
about
15,000
other
workers
employed
by
Harrah’s
Entertainment
— and
could,
by
contractual
right,
organize
the
maids
free
from
company
opposition.
Moreover,
putting
the
property’s
maids in
the
union
column
would
leave
labor
foe
Sheldon
Adelson’s
Venetian
and
Palazzo
as the
lone
nonunion
holdouts
on the
Strip —
not to
mention
give the
union a
few
hundred
more
dues-paying
members.
But the
Culinary’s
decision
is
strategic
— and
not
without
precedent.
Culinary
Secretary-Treasurer
D.
Taylor
said the
union
has
maintained
a
long-standing
policy
of
avoiding
organizing
drives
at
casinos
whose
fates
are
uncertain,
and that
is the
case
with
Imperial
Palace.
“It
would be
somewhat
disingenuous
to pick
up a
place
and then
see it
close,”
Taylor
said.
“The
workers
are
there
and then
there’s
not much
you can
do.
Several
thousand
workers
we
represent
would
have no
place to
go.”
Taylor
cited
the
example
of the
Boardwalk
casino,
which
MGM
Mirage
demolished
in 2006
to make
room for
CityCenter.
Rumors
of the
property’s
demise
persisted
almost
from the
moment
it was
purchased
by
casino
mogul
Steve
Wynn in
1998. So
the
Culinary
held
back on
organizing
its
workers.
Likewise,
the
union
stayed
away
from the
Aladdin
while
its
owners
went
through
bankruptcy
proceedings,
Taylor
said.
Years
later,
in 2005,
the
Culinary
organized
workers
there.
As for
Imperial
Palace,
which
was
purchased
by
Harrah’s
in 2005,
casino
industry
insiders
and Wall
Street
analysts
had
expected
the
company
to
implode
the
29-year-old
property
to
capitalize
on its
prized
Strip
location.
The
2,600-room
hotel
was
targeted
for
redevelopment
in 2006,
but that
plan was
delayed
when two
private
equity
companies
purchased
Harrah’s
last
year.
Taylor
said the
new
owners
have not
clarified
their
intent,
so the
union is
still
assuming
Imperial
Palace
will be
razed.
Batjer
said the
hotel is
still
part of
a
redevelopment
plan.
“There’s
no
shortage
of
people
who call
us to
organize,”
Taylor
said.
And
workers
at
properties
that
seem
destined
for
destruction
are last
in line,
he said.
There
may also
be
another
factor
at work.
The
Culinary
is
spending
its
energy
these
days
lining
up its
ducks to
try to
organize
a much
larger
prize,
Station
Casinos,
a
nonunion
gaming
giant
that
owns and
operates
10 major
casinos
and
employs
14,000
people.
An
Imperial
Palace
maid
leading
the
organizing
effort
said the
Culinary
told her
“our
hands
are tied
because
we’re
trying
to get
Station.”
Taylor
acknowledges
that the
Culinary
is
targeting
Station
Casinos,
but said
that’s
not the
reason
the
Culinary
hasn’t
reached
out to
Imperial
Palace
maids.
The
Imperial
Palace
situation
is
reminiscent
of when
maids at
the San
Remo
walked
out in
the
1990s
over
working
conditions
and
pleaded
with the
Culinary
for
representation.
The
walkout
occurred
just as
the
union
had won
a
protracted
fight to
organize
the MGM
Grand.
The
company,
which
had been
stridently
anti-union,
gave the
Culinary
a year
to
organize
workers,
free
from
retaliation.
The
Culinary
decided
to throw
all of
its
resources
into
unionizing
the MGM
Grand,
and
declined
to
organize
the
maids at
San
Remo.
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