The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Ballpark workers enjoy chance to return

- By Noah Trister

A suite attendant at the Miami Marlins’ home ballpark, Lisa Eckstein had a chance to reconnect with a familiar face when she returned to work this season.

“I have a guest I’ve taken care of for 18 years,” she said. “Their initial reaction was to come and hug me because we’re like family — and then we’re doing the elbow thing.”

It would be premature to say the scene at major league ballparks has completely returned to normal, but there’s no question this season has been a step in that direction — perhaps most crucially for the people who work there. With fans back in the stands and concession­s being sold, ballpark employees had a chance to return after the pandemic hit many of them hard.

“For some of my coworkers it was pretty tough, because that was their only job,” said Eugenia Mays, who has worked at Coors Field in Denver for about two decades. “So unemployme­nt was kicked in, food stamp was kicked in, and you just have to learn how to budget and how to do things off of that point. Some got other jobs, some had to buddy up with others to live together.”

After a significan­tly shortened 2020 season, baseball returned this year with at least

some fans attending in person. All teams have now opened their parks to full capacity.

Delaware North, a concession­aire that operates at 11 big league ballparks, says it has recalled around 8,000 employees and hired around 3,000 new ones since Jan. 1 at those parks.

“We are continuing to recruit additional associates who have worked for Delaware North to come back and are seeing more do so now that they see our safe and exciting operations are back in action,” company spokesman Glen White said.

Eckstein recalled when the coronaviru­s crisis brought basketball and hockey to a standstill last year — and the start of the baseball season was postponed.

“We got an email that said go ahead and start your unemployme­nt benefits because nobody knows what’s happening,” she said.

She described the unemployme­nt system as a “nightmare” but said her union — Unite Here — was crucial in helping people navigate it.

Eckstein said she was apprehensi­ve about going back to work this season. She hadn’t been going out much, except for groceries, but she knew there would be safety precaution­s.

“We had discussion­s that we would be afforded the PPP that we needed … that social distancing would occur, and if we had any difficulty, of course we always have someone to go back to besides the company, which would be the union,” she said. “It’s been very good as far as all that goes.”

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tom Congdon, center, a vendor at Pittsburgh sports venues for 38 years, mans his beer and water cart in the concourse at PNC Park for a baseball game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Atlanta Braves in Pittsburgh Monday.
GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tom Congdon, center, a vendor at Pittsburgh sports venues for 38 years, mans his beer and water cart in the concourse at PNC Park for a baseball game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Atlanta Braves in Pittsburgh Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States