Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Hyatt Helps Unemployed Housekeepers

Is that why they fired them?

FLASHBACK:


“If you stayed at the Hyatt last night and you bumped into the housekeeper, would you notice a difference?’’


And WHO WOULD CARE, right?


"A hard ending for housekeepers; Uncommon outsourcing eliminates 100 Hyatt jobs" by Katie Johnston Chase, Globe Staff | September 17, 2009

And WAIT until you SEE HOW!!!


When the housekeepers at the three Hyatt hotels in the Boston area were asked to train some new workers, they said they were told the trainees would be filling in during vacations.

On Aug. 31, staffers learned the full story: None of them would be making the beds and cleaning the showers any longer. All of them were losing their jobs. The trainees, it turns out, were employees of a Georgia company, Hospitality Staffing Solutions, who were replacing them that day.

The move to outsource the jobs of about 100 housekeeping employees at the Hyatt Regency Boston, Hyatt Regency Cambridge, and Hyatt Harborside at Logan International Airport is unusual in the hospitality industry, which counts on the housekeeping staff to help make sure hotel guests are comfortable....

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After hearing the news at meetings last month, employees cried and screamed, said Drupattie Jungra, 55, who had worked at the Cambridge Hyatt for more than 21 years and made $15.69 an hour, plus benefits.

“Where am I going to go look for a job?’’ said Jungra, a widow who regularly sends money to her family in Guyana and whose four grown sons live with her.

“It’s unbelievable,’’ said Lucine Williams, 41, who has worked at the Hyatt Regency Boston for nearly 22 years and was making $15.32 an hour plus health, dental, and 401(k) benefits when she lost her job....

Umm, SHE DID NOT LOSE IT, it was TAKEN FROM HER!

I think you KNOW WHY, right, readers?

Williams, a single mother of a 13-year-old with asthma, stocked up on medication before her insurance runs out at the end of the month. Last week, the former Hyatt Regency Boston housekeeper also had to cancel an airline ticket she’d bought the day before she was laid off to go see her father in Barbados. She hasn’t seen him since 2005, and isn’t sure when she’ll see him again....

The dismissed workers received two weeks of pay when they were let go, plus one week of pay for every year they worked at the Hyatt up to five or 10 years, depending on the hotel. According to the housekeepers, two Hyatt employees from each hotel were asked to continue working, though it was unclear if they would be employed by the Hyatt or by the staffing firm....

Janice Loux, the president of Unite Here Local 26, a union that represents local hotel workers, said the new workers will make $8 an hour and receive no benefits, based on information from a Hospitality Staffing Solutions employee. Staffing firm president Rick Holliday sent out an e-mail stating his employees made competitive wages but didn’t answer further questions....

Loux called the outsourcing a “race to the bottom.’’ The Hyatt housekeepers were not part of the union but reached out to Local 26, which is organizing a picket and rally in support of the housekeepers today at 5 p.m. at the downtown Hyatt....

Hyatt officials confirmed the layoffs at the three hotels, but declined to say whether the chain was considering similar moves in other locations across the country. “As part of an ongoing drive to address challenging economic conditions, the Hyatt hotels of Boston have restructured their housekeeping services,’’ according to a statement from the hotel. “Regrettably, the restructuring included staff reductions.’’

Like many hotels in the Boston area, the Hyatt has struggled this year, as a recession has caused people to cut down on their travel plans. Boston area hotels experienced a 21 percent drop in revenue per available room in June compared to the year before, according to PKF Hospitality Research, and 10 percent in July. Chicago-based Hyatt reported revenue fell 18 percent to $1.6 billion in the first half of this year.

Other hotels have taken a different approach to riding out the recession. Earlier this year the Liberty Hotel ended its contract with the company that provided its security and night janitorial service and replaced them with hotel workers from other departments who might have otherwise been laid off....

And I heard they were happy as a pig in shit about it!

Paul Sacco, the president of the Massachusetts Lodging Association, said he isn’t aware of any other hotels that have outsourced their cleaning staffs but wasn’t surprised by the move. “In these economic times, it just calls for unusual initiatives that maybe we wouldn’t have looked at before,’’ he said.

But Sacco pointed out that outsourcing has been going on for years at companies around the country and that not only would the move save the Hyatt money, it wouldn’t affect the hotel guests. “If you stayed at the Hyatt last night and you bumped into the housekeeper, would you notice a difference?’’

Yeah, they are JUST a SLAVE for the elite.

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Today
:

"Hyatt extends benefits for fired workers" by Katie Johnston Chase, Globe Staff | September 22, 2009

Hyatt Hotels & Resorts is extending the health care benefits of the 98 housekeepers who were fired from the three Boston-area Hyatt hotels last month, according to a statement from the company yesterday.

The fired workers’ health care benefits - originally set to expire at the end of September - have been extended until the end of the year. Hyatt also said it has committed to helping each housekeeper find a new job, “utilizing every commercially reasonable means available’’ and is creating a task force to assist the workers....

Why not just GIVE THEM THEIR JOBS BACK, huh?

Hyatt has been caught in a firestorm of public criticism since the Globe revealed that the hotel company laid off the staff housekeepers at the Hyatt Regency Boston, Hyatt Regency Cambridge, and Hyatt Harborside Hotel on Aug. 31, citing challenging economic conditions, and replaced them with lower-paid workers from Georgia-based Hospitality Staffing Solutions....

So they are hoping this will make it go away, right?

The move to outsource housekeepers - generally the largest part of a hotel’s payroll - is an unusual one in the hotel industry, and there has been an outpouring of support for the fired workers....

See: Hyatt Housekeepers Raise Hell

They still aren't getting those well-paying jobs back.

We'll see if
the Globe gets action or keeps up the pressure.

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