The Borneo Post

‘Not worth it’: LA restaurant­s boost pay to lure wary workers

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LOS ANGELES: Businesses have reopened in Los Angeles and elsewhere in the US, with “We’re hiring” signs everywhere.

But if life has a pre-Covid feel, a new challenge has arisen for restaurant­s: workers are not willing to return at any cost.

“We are dealing with a staffing shortage that I have not experience­d in my career,” said Skyler Gamble, a manager at Acme Hospitalit­y, which oversees several restaurant­s in Santa Barbara around two hours’ drive north of Los Angeles.

“Our experience in the last six to nine months as business levels have rebounded, is that fewer and fewer candidates respond to job postings.”

The hospitalit­y industry was slammed by coronaviru­s and pandemic-related restrictio­ns, shedding millions of jobs.

But any restaurate­urs counting on a return to normal have experience­d a rude awakening.

Classified ads abound on the internet – waiters, cooks and bartenders are in high demand.

But in a major shift in power, employers wanting to land a qualified worker increasing­ly have to stand out from the crowd.

Craig Martin, who owns Cafe 50’s on Santa Monica Boulevard in Los Angeles, has to replace a cook. Faced with a lack of applicatio­ns, he is offering a US$2,000 hiring bonus -- US$500 per month over four months.

Like many who are trying to hire, Martin blames pandemicre­lated unemployme­nt benefits for the apparent labour shortage.

Many former service industry employees are “not even thinking to look for jobs,” he said.

‘Not rushing back’

The reality is more complex, said Enrique Lopezlira, director of the low-wage work programme at the UC Berkeley labour Center.

Employers complainin­g about the market should acknowledg­e that they are simply unable to find workers “at the wage and quality of job” they are willing to offer, he said.

Many hospitalit­y workers do not receive paid sick leave or health care benefits, and are “still not willing to come back into the labour force because they still feel very much at risk of the virus,” particular­ly with Covid variants spreading, he said.

The issue of childcare, especially during the summer months, is also affecting women’s return to the workplace.

For University of California Berkeley economist Sylvia Allegretto, there is “definitely not a worker shortage.”

“But employers find it strange that workers are taking their best options as the economy opens up and not rushing back to the lowest paying jobs with low to no benefits,” said Allegretto.

‘Abused at work’

Before the pandemic, Kenzie McMillan worked as a waitress at a Hollywood restaurant.

Overnight in March 2020, she lost her job with “no heads up, no warning,” and without compensati­on.

When her former boss called in June last year asking her to return, she said no. Going back to work would have meant losing her unemployme­nt benefits, and she feared passing the virus to a housemate who has an autoimmune disease.

“It’s not worth it, again I wasn’t getting paid enough,” said the 27 year-old, who did not get medical insurance at the restaurant job, and was getting “tired” from the physical demands of the work.

For Allegretto, it is clear that employers are going to have to “up their game to compete for workers.”

Both Acme Hospitalit­y and Martin – of Cafe 50’s – said they have increased their wages.

But it is “hard to forecast” whether the improved pay and benefits currently on offer in many establishm­ents will remain once the economy fully recovers, which is not likely until late next year, said Lopezlira.

“The whole workforce has changed,” said McMillan, who sees parallels with the #MeToo movement.

Women were exploited “for so long until they were like, ‘oh, actually I don’t have to do this and I can actually say no,’” she said.

McMillan found a new job in April, at a trendy Hollywood hotel, where she is paid US$17.50 an hour and finally has medical insurance.

“We’ve realised that we don’t actually have to be abused at work,” she said.

 ??  ?? Los Angeles restaurant­s wanting to land a qualified worker increasing­ly have to stand out from the crowd.
Los Angeles restaurant­s wanting to land a qualified worker increasing­ly have to stand out from the crowd.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? People walk by a closed restaurant at LA Live in downtown Los Angeles, California.
— AFP photos People walk by a closed restaurant at LA Live in downtown Los Angeles, California.

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