Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Judge voids union pact at Trump casino

- WAYNE PARRY

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — A federal bankruptcy judge in Delaware on Friday voided the struggling Trump Taj Mahal Casino Resort’s contract with its union workers, giving owner Trump Entertainm­ent Resorts a big part of its plan to keep the casino open and save its 3,000 jobs.

But those workers were angry after Judge Kevin Gross granted the company’s request to terminate its contract with Local 54 of the Unite Here union. Trump Entertainm­ent said that if the ruling went against it, it would close the Taj Mahal on Nov. 13. The company and billionair­e investor Carl Icahn had said the casino can’t survive without shedding costly pension and health care obligation­s.

“The decision today will certainly enrage the workers who have relied on and fought for their health care for three decades,” said Bob McDevitt, president of Local 54, which lost guarantees on wages, pensions and health care. “We intend to continue to fight this both in the courts and in the streets.”

Union members immediatel­y announced plans to picket the Taj Mahal next Friday for three hours. Valerie McMorris, a 45-year-old waitress at the casino with a 15-year-old son on her benefits, said she was disgusted by the decision.

“With the stroke of a pen, we’ve gone from middle-class jobs in this city to working poor,” she said. “My co-workers and I are absolutely appalled.”

Another big hurdle still remains in the company’s plan to keep the casino open: getting a study commission appointed by Gov. Chris Christie to agree to state aid for the Taj Mahal and other struggling casinos — something that is far from assured.

“We are proud of our efforts to keep the Taj Mahal open, to deliver our loyal customers a continued first-class gaming experience and to have the ability to save 3,000 jobs in a very difficult Atlantic City economy,” said Robert Griffin, chief executive officer of Trump Entertainm­ent. “We look forward to working with our elected officials. With bipartisan leadership we believe we can take a collective step toward a brighter future in Atlantic City.”

Referring to Icahn, McDevitt said: “Tropicana’s major owner wants you to believe that the demand to take away workers’ health insurance is necessary because of the financial situation at the Taj Mahal and in Atlantic City. We believe it has nothing to do with either. He has a long history of eliminatin­g, reducing or freezing worker benefits, which sometimes saddles government agencies with the burden of cleaning up the mess.”

Icahn has rejected the union criticism and said he saved the Tropicana four years ago by acquiring it in a similar fashion to how he would acquire the Taj Mahal.

Icahn, who owns the Taj Mahal’s $286 million in debt, would swap that debt for ownership of the casino and invest $100 million into it. But that investment is contingent on government aid from Atlantic City and the state.

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