Holiday disruption at US hotels as 10,000 workers strike

Union says workers on strike at 25 hotels in nine US cities, with the stoppage set to last up to three days

By Reuters

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US hotel workers demonstrate as they strike over the Labour Day holiday weekend outside of the Boston Park Plaza Hotel in Boston, Massachusetts, on September 2, 2024. — AFP
US hotel workers demonstrate as they strike over the Labour Day holiday weekend outside of the Boston Park Plaza Hotel in Boston, Massachusetts, on September 2, 2024. — AFP

Published: Tue 3 Sep 2024, 4:47 PM

Last updated: Tue 3 Sep 2024, 4:49 PM

Dozens of US hotels faced disruptions during Monday's busy Labour Day public holiday as over 10,000 workers went on strike after contract talks stalled, employees and the Unite Here union said.

Wearing red shirts and banging buckets, Unite Here members picketed outside Hilton Worldwide, Hyatt Hotels and Marriott International locations from Honolulu, Hawaii to Boston, Massachusetts, to demand higher pay.


The strike is occurring as the industry sees a nine per cent increase in Labour Day weekend domestic travel from last year, according to American Automobile Association booking data.

In calls to hotels in Hawaii, Boston and San Jose, California, front-desk staff said services such as restaurants and housekeeping were disrupted due to worker shortages on the strike's second day.

"The hotel is open but it's very limited workers," said an employee at the Hyatt Regency Waikiki Beach in Honolulu.

Hyatt has contingency plans to minimise the impact on operations related to strike activity, Michael D'Angelo, head of labour relations at the hotel chain said in a statement.

Hilton and Hyatt said they remain committed to negotiating a fair agreement with the union.

Marriott did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Unite Here said workers were on strike at 25 hotels in nine US cities, with the stoppage set to last up to three days.

"Hotel workers across the US are celebrating Labour Day by fighting for raises, fair workloads, and the reversal of Covid-era service and staffing cuts,” Unite Here International President Gwen Mills said in a statement.

Workers say wages do not cover living costs and hotels have not restored staffing levels slashed during the Covid-19 pandemic, the statement said.

Unite Here members won record contracts last year after rolling strikes in Los Angeles and a 47-day strike at Detroit casinos, according to the union which represents hotel, casino and airport workers in the United States and Canada.


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