East Bay Times

Laid-off workers want priority in rehiring in return to jobs

Hotel and airport employees are pushing members of the City Council to adopt a ‘right to recall’ ordinance

- By Laurence Du Sault ldusault@bayareanew­sgroup.com

A caravan of about 100 honking vehicles gathered near the Oakland airport Monday in a rally organized by hotel and airport workers fighting to get their jobs back.

The workers want the Oakland City Council to pass an emergency

“right to recall” ordinance, which would guarantee that hotel, airport and some restaurant workers laid off during coronaviru­s shutdowns get priority if their former employers start hiring back. The proposal is expected to be introduced today by councilmem­ber Sheng Thao.

“We live day by day for food, rent,” said Hidalia Cruz, who was a housekeepe­r for the Oakland Holiday Inn & Suites until she was laid off in early April. “We don’t have savings. We need this.”

California has lost 43.9% of its leisure and hospitalit­y jobs since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, far exceeding other economic sectors, according to a monthly California Labor Market Review in May from the state’s Employment Developmen­t Department. Roughly 10,800 Oakland workers would be affected by the right to recall legislatio­n, according to an estimate by the East Bay Alliance for a Sustainabl­e Economy. These mostly lowwage workers are anxiously waiting for their employers to start hiring employees back.

“But some unscrupulo­us employers will use the COVID-19 crisis as a pretext to remove older workers in favor of cheaper, new workers, or to remove workers who have spoken up for their rights in the past,” wrote Thao in a report to the city council.

“However bad their economy is, ours is worse right now,” said Cruz about hotel and airport employers. Cruz, who is a single mother of two, said the ordinance is her best hope.

For restaurant workers, the proposed law isn’t as promising. Although fast-food franchises and event centers are included, restaurant­s employing less than 500 are not. EBASE estimates about 5,400 restaurant workers would be excluded — more than half of the restaurant industry in Oakland.

“This has been a low-blow for restaurant employees because

they’ve been counting down the seconds before they can go back to work,” said Maria Moreno, a restaurant worker and community organizer for the Restaurant Opportunit­y Center.

Organized labor groups around the state have been pushing similar measures. San Francisco and Los Angeles have adopted right to recall ordinances, and multiple agencies are now pushing

for statewide legislatio­n.

“We’re talking about workers who have spent their entire careers — 30, 40 years — working in these industries, often for the same employers,” said

Louise Auerhahn, director of economic and workforce policy for Working Partnershi­ps USA, an organizati­on pushing for AB3216, a bill that would grant some hospitalit­y and leisure work

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