New York Post

HOTEL SAFETY ACCORD

Unions OK virus drill

- By NOAH MANSKAR and LISA FICKENSCHE­R

After months of squabbling over costs, more than 130 Big Apple hotels have struck a deal with unions to impose strict sanitary standards to keep workers and guests safe from the coronaviru­s.

Under the deal, hotel rooms will be disinfecte­d daily — regardless of whether a guest has checked out or not, and despite some hotel companies arguing for more limited interactio­n between guests and employees.

Room cleanings will be deeper and take longer than before, resulting in each houseclean­er turning over 25 percent fewer rooms, although hoteliers avoided demands for shampooing the carpets every day. The union also backed down on a request that no one, including cleaning staff, be allowed to enter a room for 48 hours after a guest has checked out.

Hotels that don’t already have them will be required to purchase new vacuum cleaners equipped with air filters, and they will need to hire staff dedicated to cleaning elevator buttons, door knobs and countertop­s in their public areas.

“This agreement creates a sanitizati­on team that will clean the lobbies and hallways at least hourly and it’s a different team from the housekeepe­rs,” explained Rich Maroko, chief counsel of the Hotel Trades Council.

Union leaders argue that the deal is a winning strategy for luring tourists and business travelers back to the Big Apple.

But the agreement, which applies to the Four Seasons, Sheraton New York and Hilton New York, will also cost the industry in the form of an expanded payroll at a time when business is struggling.

“We are all suffering right now. No one is winning,” Rudy Tauscher, the general manager of the Four Seasons, told The Post. The union agreement “has good points, but some are overreachi­ng and create a heavy burden,” he said.

Hotel occupancy levels are currently at 45 percent, according to data provider STR, and the vast majority of NYC hotels are still closed. The Omni Berkshire Place hotel at East 52nd Street recently announced that it won’t reopen its doors at all. Others, including the Times Square Edition hotel, could follow suit, according to reports.

The Coronaviru­s Safety Protocol Agreement, which was inked on Thursday, also calls for hotel guests to wear masks in all public areas of hotels. And it gives hotel staff an extra 20 paid days off on top of the existing 45 days they are entitled should they become ill.

The agreement, which ends in August, expands on a previous deal that had ended on June 15 and had included 150 properties. Just 50 of those properties are open right now.

Union officials are also pushing for legislator­s to require all hotels in the city to adhere to these higher standards.

The Hotel Associatio­n of New York City, which negotiates labor contracts on behalf of the industry, did not respond for comment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States