Los Angeles Times

Anaheim election donations surge

- By Hugo Martin hugo.martin@latimes.com

With less than a week to go before voters decide the fate of a controvers­ial “living wage” initiative and a majority of seats on the Anaheim City Council, Walt Disney Co. and labor unions are spending heavily in the final push before the Nov. 6 election.

Next week’s election has drawn a combined total of more than $7 million in contributi­ons, an increase of $2.7 million in the last month alone, according to campaign reports for donations made before Oct. 25.

The Burbank multimedia giant and unions representi­ng workers at the Disneyland Resort have donated a total of more than $1 million in the last month, with most spent on direct mail literature, postage and consultant­s.

The unions, led by Unite Here Local 11, which represents hotel workers in Anaheim, have contribute­d $1.9 million to candidates and to support Measure L, the initiative to require hospitalit­y businesses to pay higher wages if they accept a city tax break. The unions led the petition drive to put Measure L on the ballot.

Walt Disney, through Disney Worldwide Services, has donated $1.6 million to candidates and independen­t committees, including a committee opposed to Measure L, called No on the Anaheim Job Killer Initiative. Disney’s donations to fight the measure were made before it qualified for the ballot in June.

The measure would require hospitalit­y businesses that get a city tax break to pay workers an hourly wage of at least $15 starting in January, increasing $1 an hour each year until 2022, when the wage would then be tied to the cost of living.

Anaheim City Atty. Robert Fabela has said that two hotels under constructi­on, two others in the planning phase and a shopping district are receiving tax breaks and would have to pay higher wages if Measure L passes.

Fabela said Measure L does not appear to apply to the Disneyland Resort. But the unions disagree.

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