Atlantic City Casino Union Authorizes Strike, July 4 Walkout Threatens Busy Season
Posted on: June 16, 2022, 06:07h.
Last updated on: June 16, 2022, 03:55h.
Members of the Atlantic City casino union Unite Here Local 54 have authorized their leaders to call a strike at any time after July 1 unless new labor agreements are reached with the nine resorts.
The collective bargaining agreements that dictate minimum pay and an array of working conditions for some 10,000 hospitality service workers employed by the Atlantic City casinos expired June 1. Unite Here Local 54 officials are negotiating new terms with casino reps, but the two sides are seemingly far from signing new contracts.
Unite Here said about 96% of the “several thousand” union members who voted yesterday during the strike authorization lent their backing to such a protest.
The industry better not take this lightly,” warned Bob McDevitt, president of the Local 54 chapter. “This is a no B.S. thing.”
Union leaders are readying their arsenal of negotiating weapons by asking members to authorize a strike. The approval could give the union the upper hand in the deliberations over the next two weeks, as the resorts would suffer greatly should their bartenders, cooks, waitstaff, housekeepers, bellmen, and porters walk off the job during the long July 4 Independence Day weekend.
THE VOTES ARE IN: Thousands of casino workers cast ballots today and 96% have voted in favor of authorizing the worker negotiation committee to call a strike if an agreement is not reached with Caesars, Harrah’s, Tropicana, and Borgata, by July 1st and Hard Rock by July 3rd! pic.twitter.com/OZrLsgHeuO
— UNITE HERE Local 54 (@UHLocal54) June 15, 2022
Casinos Keep Quiet
The Atlantic City casino union is seeking pay increases for its members to better allow most workers to maintain middle-class lifestyles. In recent contract negotiations, the union has more focused on health and retirement benefits, as well as worker safety, than direct take-home pay.
But with inflation soaring and Americans feeling the pain at the gas pump, Unite Here says its members deserve a “significant” raise. What sort of percentage increase that entails isn’t exactly clear.
So far, the casinos’ representation in the bargaining has opted to refrain from speaking publicly about the discussions and what the industry seeks through the new agreements.
Ruth Ann Joyce, a longtime Atlantic City bartender who has worked at Harrah’s and Hard Rock, says the casinos’ low pay is resulting in skeleton staffing.
Historically, our fights in general have dealt with health care. This go-round, it’s about economics. We can’t find workers because there’s no money, and it’s hard to hold onto the workers we do have because they can go somewhere else and make more,” Joyce told the Associated Press.
Representatives from MGM Resorts and Caesars Entertainment are representing the nine casinos. The two companies dominate the Atlantic City gaming market. Of the $2.55 billion the brick-and-mortar casinos won last year, MGM and Caesars properties accounted for $1.36 billion of the revenue — or about 53%.
Hard Rock, which has become the second-richest casino in town behind MGM’s Borgata, also has a considerable presence in the union negotiations.
Ocean, Bally’s Exempt
Ocean Casino Resort and Bally’s will not be targeted for a strike, McDevitt said. The union boss explained that those two Boardwalk properties have ongoing agreements with Unite Here, saying they will adhere to whatever collective bargaining agreement MGM/Caesars reaches with the trade group.
Since those two casinos are not directly involved in the bargaining process, McDevitt says they will be spared from a protest. Golden Nugget and Resorts also largely follow the pack but do have a voice in the discussions.
“Bally’s and Ocean are in the green zone. Resorts and Golden Nugget are in the yellow zone. The rest are in the red zone,” McDevitt said of where a strike might occur.
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