The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Airport concession­s worker retention measure OK’d

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

The Atlanta City Council approved a measure to require new airport concession­aires to retain workers of previous firms.

Labor union UNITE HERE has pushed for worker retention ordinances in other cities, and Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed’s administra­tion worked with the union on the ordinance the city council approved Monday.

The ordinance establishe­s an airport service contractor worker retention program. It requires companies that win new concession­s contracts at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport retain workers of a former employer for a 90-day trial period, with certain limitation­s.

Without such an ordinance, whenever contracts are awarded to new companies to revamp restaurant­s or shops at the airport, “we face the chance of losing our jobs,” said Robert Davis, a server at the Cafe Intermezzo at Hartsfield-Jackson and a UNITE HERE member.

The workers must pass background checks and drug and alcohol testing, and the new measure does not apply to managers or executives. If the new concession­aire needs fewer employees, it would retain employees based on seniority.

”The idea here is we want to lessen the chaos that arises when there is a significan­t transition of concession­s vendors at the airport,” said Melissa Mullinax, senior advisor to Reed. Of 6,000 concession­s workers at the world’s busiest airport, about 1,400 are represente­d by the UNITE HERE union, she said.

The worker retention language is already written into recent solicitati­ons for new concession­aires to operate airport shops at Hartsfield-Jackson.

“When new vendors are selected there’s no reason that the workers who have passed all

the security tests, who have expertise and strong customer service skills, should lose their jobs during that transition period,” Mullinax said.

The airport concession­s office would enforce the new measure, she said.

Changeover­s in concession­aires would come after the award of contracts for airport shops in a massive revamp of retail at the Atlanta airport, and after the award of contracts for new restaurant­s on Concourse E. The airport shop contracts and Concourse E restaurant contracts have not yet gone to the Atlanta City Council for approval.

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