The Palm Beach Post

Union, Caesars strike deal in Vegas

- By Regina Garcia Cano

LAS VEGAS — Negotiator­s have reached a tentative labor agreement that would cover about a quarter of the 50,000 hotel and casino workers who are threatenin­g to strike in Las Vegas.

The Culinary Workers Union Local 226 on Friday said the new fifive- year deal with Caesars Entertainm­ent covers about 12,000 workers at nine casino resorts on the Las Vegas Strip. Tens of thousands of bartenders, housekeepe­rs, bellmen and other unionized workers at 34 casino-hotels on the Strip and in downtown Las Vegas have sought new, fifive- year contracts for months.

The current contracts expired at midnight.

Ninety-nine percent of about 25,000 workers voted last week to authorize a strike at any time starting Friday. No date has been set, but workers have started signing up for strike pay, fifinancia­l assistance and picketing shifts.

Wages, workplace training and job security have been the main sticking points in negotiatio­ns.

Caesars’ properties covered by the tentative agreement are Bally’s, Flamingo, Harrah’s, Paris, Planet Hollywood, The Cromwell, The Linq and Caesars Palace, including Nobu.

The Culinary Union and companies that would be affected if workers walk off the job have held bargaining sessions since February. Casino-hotels that could still see a strike, if the deal between workers and Caesars sticks, include Aria, Bellagio, Tropicana, Stratosphe­re and Golden Nugget.

Analysts with Deutsche Bank put the likelihood of a citywide strike “as low” and said they believe negotiatio­ns could continue.

“Recall, in 2013, the Culinar y Uni on re mained i n negotiatio­ns with some Strip operators for several months past the June 2013 contract expiration,” analysts with the bank noted this week. “Business during this time was uninterrup­ted.”

The last citywide strike was in 1984, costing the city and workers millions of dollars.

Casino-hotels would lose unionized bartenders, housekeepe­rs, cocktail and food servers, porters, bellmen, cooks and other kitchen workers in the event of a strike.

MGM Resorts Internatio­nal and Caesars Entertainm­ent operate more than half the properties that have been negotiatin­g contracts. Both companies have declined to provide details of their contingenc­y plans.

The union and hospitalit­y experts have said the companies would use replacemen­t workers and tr y to bring some in from properties outside Las Vegas.

Properties that would not be afffffffff­fffected include Wynn Las Vegas, Encore, The Venetian and Palazzo.

The strike could come as fans head to the tourist destinatio­n for the Stanley Cup Final. The union for profession­al hockey players in the National Hockey League sent a letter to the Culinary Union on Wednesday expressing its support for the casino workers’ “attempts to reach a fair and equitable agreement.”

“It is hoped that an accommodat­ion can promptly be reached that will enable you to continue to provide the high level of service and profession­alism that you have long exhibited,” National Hockey League Players’ Associatio­n executive director Donald Fehr wrote.

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