San Diego Union-Tribune

AS TOURISM REBOUNDS, 3M WORKERS WAIT FOR CALLBACK

Some companies plan to stay with fewer employees

- BY JONATHAN O’CONNELL

Business is rebounding quickly across the country at hotels, restaurant­s and airlines, but millions of employees have been left behind as companies seek to lock in pandemic changes to their models and slash labor costs in the future.

For a year, hotels, airlines, casinos and restaurant­s — at least those that remained in business

— have made do with far fewer workers, often well under half of the number they employed before the pandemic. Customers have adjusted, with hotel guests checking themselves in on mobile apps and restaurant patrons content with picking up takeout.

Employment has begun to recover, with 13.8 million people employed in leisure and hospi

tality jobs this March, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That’s up from 8.7 million last April after mass layoffs took place.

But that’s still 3 million jobs short of where the industry was before the pandemic, and it remains to be seen how many of the industry’s still out-of-work employees will get a call back with business and internatio­nal travel to the United States still nearly nonexisten­t. And some large employers are signaling they plan to make do with fewer employees as they experiment with new business models that allow them to cut labor costs.

Hilton’s chief executive said recently that he’s focused on reducing labor costs at the chain’s 6,400 hotels.

“The work we’re doing right now in every one of our brands is about making them higher-margin businesses and creating more labor efficienci­es,” Hilton chief executive Chris Nassetta

told investors in February. “When we get out of the crisis, those businesses will be higher-margin and require less labor than they did preCOVID.”

Marriott is testing “contactles­s arrival kiosks” at hotels in New York, Louisiana and Miami, along with colossal vending machines to replace convenienc­e stores.

During the first week of April, more than 10 million travelers passed through security at U.S. airports, 12 times the number during the same week last year, according to the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion.

People are heading south in particular, where they are finding warm weather and less restrictiv­e health protocols. Among the top 25 U.S. markets, hotels that are open in Tampa (82 percent) and Phoenix (77 percent) reported the highest March occupancy levels. The lowest were Boston (39 percent) and Minneapoli­s (38 percent), according to the data firm STR.

“Spring has been good in Florida and Texas,” said

STR’s Jan Freitag.

The number of visitors to Las Vegas has risen three straight months, according to the city’s tourism agency. Gambling revenue on the Strip was up 8 percent in February over January and probably will rise further after Nevada raised capacity limits on March 15.

The reopening has prompted acute hiring blitzes. United Airlines reopened its flight training school on April 6 in expectatio­n of needing more pilots. The IHOP chain announced plans to hire as many as 10,000 people as customers return to indoor eating. Amusement parks are hiring thousands of seasonal workers.

But enough companies have used the pandemic to refine technologi­es and practices in order to serve customers with fewer people that laid-off workers are wondering whether they’ll ever get the call to come back.

Nely Reinante is a 45year-old mother of three living in one of the nation’s tourism hot spots, Hawaii. A Filipino American, she has 10 years of experience as a housekeepe­r, including three years at the Hilton Hawaiian Village, in Waikiki, where she worked until the pandemic arrived.

She said she often cleaned 10 to 15 rooms a day and felt she was a big part of making hotel guests feel welcome.

“Our guests pay hundreds of dollars every night they stay. They deserve to get the best experience and the best service,” she said. “They are coming to enjoy the special treatment of Hawaii.”

She is wondering how much service the hotel will be offering guests in the future, and whether it will need her again. When the pandemic arrived a year ago, the hotel sent her and co-workers home on furlough. Since then, Hilton and other chains have experiment­ed with serving guests with dramatical­ly fewer staff members, including housekeepi­ng.

Some high-end hotels are only cleaning rooms every

other night, instead of nightly. Such a change could result in the hotel employing half the number of housekeepi­ng staff, jobs that are typically filled by women of color, including many immigrants. Nationally that would mean the permanent loss of millions of jobs.

Reinante said she thinks the hotel has hired less than half of the roughly 700 housekeepi­ng staff it used to have. If she cannot return to work soon, she said, her family of five may have to give up their apartment and move into a two-bedroom unit where her sister-in-law lives.

“If we are not called back then we will be permanentl­y laid off,” she said.

D. Taylor, president of the Unite Here union representi­ng 300,000 hotel, casino and food service employees, said the hotel industry had been looking for a reason to cut labor costs before the pandemic arrived. He said the industry risked going through a transforma­tion akin to that of airlines after the 9/11 attacks: from offering customers a personaliz­ed experience to ruthless efficiency in the form of endless fees and upcharges.

Taylor said 60 percent to 70 percent of his members remain unemployed. “Are some people getting called back? Sure. But what we are seeing a lot, especially in the hotel industry, is to have a largely jobless recovery.”

How much the slimming of these services will remain in place once travel more fully returns is unknown because they are far from fully recovered, largely because many of them rely on some business travel, which remains nearly nonexisten­t.

Business travel and internatio­nal travel to the United States, which remains meager, will need to come back to see a larger share of jobs return, said Tori Emerson Barnes of the U.S. Travel Associatio­n. “It’s just not going to be enough to fill the hole until we get internatio­nal travel and business meetings and events back,” she said.

 ?? MATT MCCLAIN THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Wanda Barnes works in a renovated lobby at the Ven at Embassy Row hotel in Washington last month.
MATT MCCLAIN THE WASHINGTON POST Wanda Barnes works in a renovated lobby at the Ven at Embassy Row hotel in Washington last month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States