Toronto Star

Condos risk hotel jobs, critics warn

Conversion­s could also hamper city’s billion-dollar tourism trade

- SARA MOJTEHEDZA­DEH WORK AND WEALTH REPORTER

A set of proposals to redevelop eight Toronto hotels into condos could endanger up to 2,000 well-paid jobs and hamstring the city’s mult-billion dollar tourism trade, according to worker advocates and industry experts.

The conversion­s impact some of Toronto’s marquee downtown venues, including the Park Hyatt and Chelsea, putting at risk some 1,300 hotel staff jobs according to David Anderson, a researcher with hospitalit­y union UNITE HERE Local 75. The plans could also threaten up to 700 non-unionized positions such as managers, he added.

“It’s extremely scary,” said Louie Naccarato, a bellman at the Courtyard Marriott, who has worked at the hotel for 38 years. “To find another position that has the ability to provide somewhat of a living wage in the city of Toronto, it’s going to be very difficult to do.”

“It’s not just the hotels that would be affected. It’s the taxi drivers. It’s the restaurant­s, it’s the tourist attraction­s,” said Judy Healy, a professor at Ryerson University’s Hospitalit­y and Tourism Management Department.

Some 52 per cent of jobs in the Greater Toronto Area are insecure, according to research by United Way and McMaster University.

But hotel positions — which feed Toron- to’s booming tourism industry — have long been an avenue for decently paid work, often benefittin­g women and new Canadians who might otherwise be marginaliz­ed in the job market, Anderson argues.

“If this was an auto plant in Oshawa this would be a national debate. We need people to recognize that these are really good jobs and they’re worth protecting,” he told the Star.

City councillor­s Ana Bailao and Kristyn Wong-Tam have called for a review of Toronto’s hotel capacity and the potential impact of condo redevelopm­ent projects, noting that in 2015 tourists spent $7.2 billion on accommodat­ion, transport and entertainm­ent. The report conducted by the city’s Economic Developmen­t Committee is expected this fall.

In some cases, the eight conversion­s — which are all at different stages in the planning process — would retain some hotel rooms, but drasticall­y reduce the number of available rooms. The Chelsea Hotel, for example, plans to retain under 20 per cent of its 1,590 rooms, according to city documents.

Patty Ma, a spokespers­on for the Ontario Municipal Board, said redevelopm­ent decisions are based on “evidence presented at hearings, provincial laws and planning policies.” In response to questions about potential job losses and the economic impact of hotel conversion­s, Ma said the board “only comment on matters within its mandate and jurisdicti­on, which includes hearing applicatio­ns and appeals, in relation to municipal planning, financial and land matters.”

While the redevelopm­ents will create short-term constructi­on jobs and some long-term retail positions, Anderson says retail positions rarely provide the kind of wages and benefits of hotel work.

“If we lose these jobs, they’re not coming back. We won’t be able to replace them,” he said.

Albertha Williams, 53, has raised two children and seen them through university and college on her room attendant salary at the Holiday Inn Yorkdale. She says if her hotel “goes under,” it’s her survival that’s at stake.

 ?? VINCE TALOTTA/TORONTO STAR ?? Louie Naccarato has worked at the Courtyard Marriott hotel for 38 years.
VINCE TALOTTA/TORONTO STAR Louie Naccarato has worked at the Courtyard Marriott hotel for 38 years.

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