The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Powerful casino union boss leaving post in Atlantic City

- By Wayne Parry

He’s led Atlantic City casino workers through three strikes, been arrested at protests nearly 10 times, and won workers including housekeepe­rs, cocktail servers and others the best contract they had ever had.

Now Bob McDevitt is stepping down as president of the main union for Atlantic City casino workers, Local 54 of Unite Here, after 26 years as one of the most powerful people in Atlantic City, able to bring the industry to its knees when he felt workers were being treated unfairly.

It is a power that he has used repeatedly; sometimes, the mere threat of a strike prompted casinos to sign a new contract.

“We represent people who traditiona­lly have not been what you would consider high-wage workers — housekeepe­rs, bartenders, cocktail servers, people who clean public areas,” he said. “It’s one thing to work as a waiter over the summer while you’re in college; it’s quite another to try to support yourself and a family on that. That’s where we come in.”

The union represents about 10,000 workers in Atlantic City who have been able to live a middle-class existence doing jobs that typically pay less in other industries.

Pugnacious and gregarious, quick with a joke and even quicker with a profanity, McDevitt was a fixture in Atlantic City who exerted his influence over local and state elected officials on matters affecting Atlantic City and its casinos. During protests, he sat down in roadways and blocked traffic; during Boardwalk rallies, he yelled into bullhorns.

Two years ago, he nearly died from a systemic infection that developed from a cut on his foot, which led to its amputation. But he recovered in time to help negotiate a new contract last year providing significan­t raises, and maintainin­g health care and pension benefits, including a $22 hourly wage for housekeepe­rs in the final year of the four-year deal.

The new contract was

reached without the union going on strike. Previously, walkouts were staged in

1999, 2004 and 2016.

The 2004 walkout, mainly over casinos’ use of non-union subcontrac­tors, lasted 34 days. But the 2016 strike was the most rancorous and controvers­ial: It led to the closure of the Trump Taj Mahal casino, which at the time was owned by billionair­e investor Carl Icahn.

That strike centered on the union’s demand that Icahn restore health insurance and pension benefits that a bankruptcy court judge had terminated. Icahn offered to restore health insurance to Taj Mahal workers, but at a level less than what workers at the city’s other casinos received, which the union rejected.

Icahn closed the casino on Oct. 10, 2016, saying he had lost $100 million while operating it; about 3,000 workers lost their jobs.

 ?? WAYNE PARRY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In 2014, Bob McDevitt, president of local 54of the UniteHERE casino workers’ union, sat on the roadway of the Atlantic City Expressway during a traffic-blocking protest in against the eliminatio­n of employee benefits at the Trump Taj Mahal casino.
WAYNE PARRY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In 2014, Bob McDevitt, president of local 54of the UniteHERE casino workers’ union, sat on the roadway of the Atlantic City Expressway during a traffic-blocking protest in against the eliminatio­n of employee benefits at the Trump Taj Mahal casino.

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