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S.F. union dispute disrupts 2 Waikiki hotels

by Unite Here (reposted)
Honolulu, October 29 – Shortly after 3 am this morning, a group of locked out hotel workers from the Sheraton Palace hotel in San Francisco began picketing the employee entrance of the Sheraton Waikiki and Royal Hawaiian hotels. Currently 4,000 hotel workers, members of UNITE HERE Local 2, have been locked-out by 14 hotels in San Francisco.

UNITE HERE Local 5, which represents the workers at all four Sheratons in Waikiki, informed management that the picket was a lawful picket line and had been approved by Local 5. Based on Local 5’s contract language, union members at the two hotels have the right to respect the picket line without being disciplined.

“We expect the vast majority of workers to respect Local 2’s picket line” said Eric Gill, Local 5’s Financial Secretary-Treasurer. “Our members know that Local 2’s fight is our fight. If hotel workers in San Francisco are forced to pay for their medical coverage then we will be next. Our members in Hawaii also support the efforts of hotel workers in San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington DC to negotiate contracts that expire in 2006, when our contract expires.”

The Sheraton Palace in San Francisco, as are the four Sheratons in Waikiki and the Sheraton Maui, is owned by Kyo-Ya Co. Ltd. and operated by Starwood. Due to a lack of progress in talks for a city-wide hotel contract, Local 2 struck four downtown hotels for a limited 2-week period. The other 10 hotels, including the Sheraton Palace, who are part of the San Francisco Multi-Employer Group chose to lock-out their employees. The Multi-Employer Group has extended the lock-out at all 14 hotels beyond the two week strike, which would have ended October 13.

“The Sheratons in Hawaii have been sending non-union staff to be strike breakers at the Sheraton Palace in San Francisco” said Hernando Tan, Local 5’s President. “They entered into the fight in San Francisco, so they should not be surprised that that fight followed them back to Hawaii.”

UNITE (formerly the Union of Needletrades, Textiles and Industrial Employees) and HERE (Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International Union) merged on July 8, 2004 forming UNITE HERE, which represents more than 440,000 active members and more than 400,000 retirees throughout North America.

For more background on the hotel workers’ struggle, visit: http://www.hotelworkersunited.org
§S.F. union dispute disrupts 2 Waikiki
by press
The Sheraton Waikiki and Royal Hawaiian hotels had to cut room service and assign some housekeeping and kitchen duties to managers yesterday after many union workers went home instead of crossing a one-day picket line set up by a San Francisco-based sister union.

Locked-out hotel workers from the Sheraton Palace hotel in San Francisco picketed employee entrances at both Waikiki hotels for most of yesterday, but the move elicited more complaints from union workers than guests, said Keith Vieira, senior vice president of Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc. in Hawaii. The company operates the Sheraton and Westin chains.

"We had employees that were upset and crying," Vieira said. "Many of them felt they were under pressure to honor a picket line that didn't really concern them. It really placed them in an awkward position."

Some 4,000 hotel workers, members of UNITE HERE Local 2, have been locked out of their jobs by 14 hotels in San Francisco. The union is a sister to Hawaii's Local 5 workers union.

The Waikiki picket was expected to end last night.

The Waikiki Sheratons, which are owned by Japan-based Kyo-ya Co., were chosen as Hawaii picket locations because the Waikiki hotels sent managers and nonunion workers to San Francisco to act as strike breakers, said Mike Casey, president of Local 2.

"Starwood and Kyo-ya have taken the lead in locking out members in San Francisco," Casey said. "We're fighting for our lives and we can't let the fight be contained to San Francisco."

By sending workers to California to operate hotels after the lockout, Starwood was just trying to protect workers' jobs by keeping the properties operating, Vieira said.

"If word of this picket gets out, I worry about Hawaii as a whole," Vieira said. "We don't need anything negative at a time when the state's visitor industry has started to rebound. It's irresponsible for the union to put the industry on the line."

While Local 5 workers at the Waikiki Sheratons were not part of the picket, the members have the right under their contract not to cross the picket line and voluntarily take a day's unpaid leave without being disciplined, said Jason Ward, spokesman for Local 5.

Hawaii's hotel union workers support hotel workers in San Francisco because "their fight is our fight," said Eric Gill, financial secretary-treasurer of Local 5.

If hotel workers in San Francisco are forced to pay for medical coverage, then Hawaii hotel workers could be next, Gill said.

Hawaii hotel workers union members also support the efforts of hotel workers in San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., to negotiate all of their contracts at the same time in 2006, he said.

The union estimates that at least 90 percent of its work force stayed home, Ward said, though the hotels said the percentage was lower.

While the picket was small, it had broad impacts for union workers, managers and for guests who were staying at Waikiki hotels in range of the noise, Ward said.

"It got the point across," he said.

Even Gov. Linda Lingle was not immune to its effects, he said. The governor was inside the Royal Hawaiian Hotel yesterday delivering remarks at a luncheon to honor firefighters.

"It's our hope that Starwood and Kyo-ya have learned a lesson and that their managers, who were forced to work for our members, will realize how hard they work," Ward said.

Although Local 2's picket was noisy, with about 20 workers from the Sheraton Palace hotel carrying megaphones and shouting, most of Sheraton's Waikiki guests were insulated from commotion because the picket took place behind the Sheraton properties, Vieira said.

"There were more complaints from guests at the Halekulani and the Waikiki Park Hotel," said David Uchiyama, regional director of communications for Starwood in Hawaii.

http://starbulletin.com/2004/10/30/business/story1.html

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Hotel workers locked out of jobs at a Sheraton hotel in San Francisco have flown to Hawaii to picket two resorts there and Hawaiian workers are honoring the picket lines, a union spokesman said.

"Hawaiian workers are honoring picket lines at the Sheraton Waikiki and Royal Hawaiian hotel in Honolulu," said David Koff, spokesman for the Unite Here union.

Both properties are operated by Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc. . Officials at the company could not be reached immediately for comment.

The union said the Sheratons in Hawaii have been sending nonunion staff to work at the San Francisco Sheraton Palace during the lockout.

http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=domesticNews&storyID=6663493

With thousands of hotel workers locked out by 14 hotels in San Francisco, some of them have flown to Waikiki to set up picket lines, and the local hotel union says it expects most of its members will decline to cross them.

http://pacific.bizjournals.com/pacific/stories/2004/10/25/daily65.html
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