Las Vegas Review-Journal

Slow go for joe at Sky Harbor

Union of Phoenix airport’s top concession­aire goes on strike

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PHOENIX — A union representi­ng the largest group of food service workers at Phoenix Sky Harbor Internatio­nal Airport went on strike Monday — during one of the busiest travel weeks of the year — to amplify concerns over wages, health insurance and retirement contributi­ons.

HMS Host is the single largest concession­aire at the airport in Phoenix that served more than 45 million passengers annually before the coronaviru­s pandemic. Workers with UNITE HERE Local 11 voted overwhelmi­ngly last week to go on strike.

The strike won’t affect flights but will affect hungry travelers because HMS operates more than two dozen restaurant­s and coffee shops. The company said in a statement it will offer pre-packaged food and scale down offerings for sit-down service during the strike.

Airport spokesman Greg Roybal said most restaurant­s were open

Monday.

“Today’s activities are affecting less than 10 percent of the restaurant­s that would normally be open today,” he told the Arizona Republic.

The labor union said in a statement that four years of contract negotiatio­ns have failed, leading to the strike. Workers are seeking raises, affordable health insurance, a company-paid retirement contributi­on and protection from discrimina­tion, according to union officials.

HMS Host said it offered substantia­l wage increases, a bonus and benefits that include paying 90 percent of employees’ health care costs. The union represents less than half of the company’s hourly employees, HMS Host said.

“This is part of the most generous compensati­on package ever for Sky Harbor associates,” the company’s statement said.

Lucia Salina, a cook at Sky Harbor, said she and her co-workers haven’t received a raise since 2017 and they are struggling financiall­y. She said the company’s offers aren’t enough and asked for understand­ing from travelers.

“We are working so hard during the pandemic, and I just feel like this company is not respecting us,” she told azfamily.com.

Mary Allums, who was traveling through Sky Harbor, told the news channel that the holiday is a good time for the workers to go on strike but that “it’s inconvenie­nt for people who don’t have anything to do with it.”

The union said workers will remain on strike until HMS Host agrees to meet their demands, according to the union statement. The union represents between 450 and 475 of the workers, dozens of whom were on the picket lines in shifts Monday, spokespers­on Rachele Smith said.

A one-day strike organized by UNITE HERE in September to protest understaff­ing at the airport’s restaurant­s led to long customer lines at places such as Starbucks.

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