Las Vegas Review-Journal

Union vote set for labor deal with Caesars

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

Thousands of Caesars Entertainm­ent Corp. union employees will vote Thursday on a five-year labor agreement union leaders are calling the best they’ve ever had.

Workers affiliated with Culinary Local 226 and Bartenders Local 165 will decide whether to ratify the tentative agreement reached in the early morning hours of June 1. Workers have to vote in person, and a simple majority is required for approval.

Culinary officials are not disclosing details of the deal, but spokeswoma­n Bethany Khan called it “the best contract ever negotiated with the highest wage increases and strongest protection­s for immigrant workers and women.”

Union leaders have been seeking an average annual increase of 4 percent over the next five years in workers’ wages and benefits. That equates to an increase of roughly $1 an hour for most union employees.

CULINARY

They’ve also sought technology that would enable workers in hotel rooms to immediatel­y notify a supervisor if an employee feels endangered.

“We feel very good (about the tentative agreement),” Geoconda Arguello Kline, secretary-treasurer of the union, said on the day the deal was reached.

“We feel the company will continue to be successful, and the union members will continue to have the American dream,” she said. “We’re going to have a ratificati­on vote for the members in their committees, and the members will know all the details of the contract. In respect to them, we’ll wait until after ratificati­on to give the details.”

Caesars also is happy with the progress.

“We are pleased to have reached a tentative five-year agreement with Culinary that addresses key economic and personal security issues,” a company spokesman said Wednesday.

The vote is scheduled to be taken between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.

The contract covers about 12,000 workers at nine Strip casinos. It was the first contract reached with any of the 34 resorts whose agreements expired at midnight June 1.

Khan said a similar ratificati­on

vote is scheduled for MGM Resorts Internatio­nal employees next week. MGM was the second major operator to tentativel­y approve a contract.

She said negotiatio­ns with the remaining 15 properties are underway, but she did not specify if any agreements are pending or which resorts’ employees would be next to consider ratificati­on votes.

Penn National Gaming, Golden Entertainm­ent and Boyd Gaming Corp. are among the other companies with properties awaiting new contracts. Several Station Casinos properties have voted for union representa­tion but have yet to draft initial contracts.

Among the largest properties where contracts have expired that are not a part of larger casino groups are the SLS Las Vegas, Treasure Island and the Westgate, as well as downtown’s Golden Nugget, Plaza, Four Queens, Golden Gate, the D Las Vegas, Downtown Grand and El Cortez.

About 25,000 workers overwhelmi­ngly approved a vote May 22 authorizin­g union management to call a strike at any time, leaving the possibilit­y that workers could walk off their jobs as summer vacation schedules arrive.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702477-3893. Follow @Rickvelott­a on Twitter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States