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NEWS & LETTERS, JULY 2003

Chicago hotel strike

Chicago--We went on strike June 15. The contract with the Congress Hotel ended at the end of last year, and we were trying to negotiate a new one, but the owner of the Congress Hotel, Albert Nasser, cut our wages by 7% in May. He also cut off our health insurance. We were earning $8 an hour before walking out.

Over three quarters of the people have been here more than 10 years, but others have moved around, and know what it’s like elsewhere. And lots of the women, and men, have another job, besides working at Congress Hotel. They need both jobs. One woman worked eight years at another hotel and has been here for two years.

Nasser is cheap. He was using scab labor to rehab rooms here, but the city found out the scabs weren’t qualified to do the plumbing and electrical work, so they had to stop. Nasser has spent lots of money, just not on a fair contract. He had the scabs put in marble bathrooms, tear up the carpeting, and install soundproofing for the apartments of Nasser’s assistant, Sholomo and his son.

And scabs are staying at the hotel. Sholomo brought them in to do our jobs, but it takes two of them to do the work of each one of us. And the Congress Hotel is paying them $11 an hour. The hotel should be putting that money behind a new contract instead.

The hotel has been making us work harder so they can spend less. The elevators we are supposed to use are always breaking down. That means the employees have to carry luggage up and down the stairs. This north tower has 12 floors and the south tower has 14. Guests are mad about taking the stairs too.

Housekeeping is usually supposed take care of 16 rooms in an eight hour shift, but when it gets busy, which is most of the time, we can’t refuse to clean more, sometimes over 30 rooms. We only get $4 for every extra room.

There are only three supervisors in the whole hotel. The housekeepers have to run all over the hotel looking for the supervisors when they need help because Nasser is too cheap to hire more supervisors.

So far we have turned away some guests at the front door. One man told management to give us a contract.

The rest of the members of Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees Local 1 around the city won a new contract last year. They make $10 an hour, going up to $12 later. That’s all we’re asking for, along with our insurance back. Workers from other hotels support our strike, too. We had hundreds with us in front of the hotel one Sunday.

If we stayed quiet, maybe they would take away our vacation, then something else, then maybe kick out the union. We are on strike for the rights of workers at the other hotels too.

--Strikers

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