San Francisco Chronicle

Airport caterers shifted to San Jose

Sky Chefs denies move is to dodge new San Francisco health care law

- By Chase DiFelician­tonio Chase DiFelician­tonio is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: chase.difelician­tonio@ sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @ChaseDiFel­ice

As many as 300 union catering workers at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport could see their jobs moved to San Jose Internatio­nal Airport, according to their union, in what they are calling a deliberate attempt to get around recently steppedup health care requiremen­ts for some workers at SFO.

Their employer, LSG Sky Chefs, claims far fewer employees will be affected and the changes are part of a longplanne­d consolidat­ion in response to the pandemic that includes moving some food operations to San Jose.

Passed in November, the Healthy Airport Ordinance took effect last month and requires family health care be provided for privatesec­tor employees to meet a higher standard, at no cost to workers. Employers can choose instead to contribute to a citymanage­d fund to cover health care expenses for workers and their families under the ordinance.

Workers represente­d by the Unite Here Local 2 union — including dishwasher­s, food prep workers, and cooks — have been notified their jobs will be relocated to the company’s San Jose facility, according to their union.

In a statement, employee and union member Linda Fajardo said she had been furloughed during the pandemic by the company and had been looking forward to returning to work.

“My job is to prepare the cold foods for the airlines, and I stand on my feet all day long in a big cooler at 38 degrees,” Fajardo said. “Now I need physical therapy for my knees, but I can’t afford it without a good insurance. My coworkers and I feel so betrayed.”

Chapter president Anand Singh said it was not a coincidenc­e that the company announced the changes around the time the ordinance began to take effect last month.

“We believe it’s illegal in addition to being abhorrent,” Singh said. He added that the union is working with the San Francisco Board of Supervisor­s on options like revoking the company’s license to operate. He said he believes the ordinance would still apply to workers, about 60% of Sky Chefs’ SFO workforce, even if they were moved since they are still servicing flights out of San Francisco.

Singh said to his knowledge other companies affected by the ordinance were in compliance with it or working to be. “Sky Chefs shouldn’t be allowed to skirt the law and get away with this. It would set a dangerous precedent,” he said.

Sky Chefs said in an email the move was part of a prior plan to consolidat­e its food operations in San Jose as a lease at SFO expired and the pandemic has dried up demand for air travel and by connection catering services.

“The number of current employees who will move from SFO to SJC will be around 1520 in total,” the company said, adding that some employees will remain at its warehouse location at SFO. The company said it has been in compliance with the ordinance and that the closure was not connected to it. Singh, the union chapter president, also said those employees could be paid up to $4 per hour less if they were moved to San Jose.

“All employees will continue to receive their normal wages at this time,” the company said.

Supervisor Rafael Mandelman, who authored the ordinance along with Supervisor Shamann Walton, has called for a hearing into the issue, and what he called the company’s “egregious violations,” of the ordinance in a statement.

In a statement requesting the hearing, Mandelman said the company had ignored the ordinance, including refusing to notify employees affected by it of their rights.

“The Runaway Shop is not a new tactic; for decades, it has been used by businesses looking to evade hardwon worker protection laws,” Mandelman said in the statement.

Trade associatio­n Airlines for America has also previously filed a lawsuit against San Francisco over the ordinance and is seeking declarator­y and injunctive relief from its requiremen­ts.

 ?? Robert Alexander / Archive Photos / Getty Images 2013 ?? Workers for LSG Sky Chefs service a commercial airliner parked at the gate at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport. Many workers are being reassigned to the San Jose airport.
Robert Alexander / Archive Photos / Getty Images 2013 Workers for LSG Sky Chefs service a commercial airliner parked at the gate at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport. Many workers are being reassigned to the San Jose airport.

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