Posted on: May 9, 2024, 02:55h.
Last updated on: May 9, 2024, 02:55h.
Hundreds of hospitality workers are scheduled to walk off the job for 48 hours starting on Friday at the Virgin Las Vegas.
The temporary strike comes as the Culinary Union is attempting to reach a five-year contract with the property for some 700 workers.
Picket Line
The walkout is to last between 5 a.m. on Friday and 5:00 a.m. on Sunday. A picket line will be staffed in front of the property.
It’s been nearly one year since the contract at Virgin Las Vegas expired on June 1, 2023 and workers are still working without a contract, that’s why the Culinary Union has called for a 48-hour strike at the Virgin Las Vegas and urge the community and customers to not cross the strike line,” Ted Pappageorge, secretary-treasurer at the Culinary Union, said in a statement.
“Workers at Virgin Las Vegas deserve fair wage increases and they are organized and ready to strike for it.”
The union is targeting not just the hotel, but also restaurants and bars at the property. These are: Casa Calavera, Funny Library Coffee Shop, Juice Bar, The Bar at Commons Club, The Kitchen at Commons Club, and The Shag Room.
Representatives of the Culinary Workers Union Local 226 and the Bartenders Union Local 165 are expected to meet management representatives at Virgin Las Vegas during a negotiation session on Tuesday.
The union is seeking increases in salary and healthcare, a reduced workload, job security, and improved rights, according to a union statement.
It’s a Fight
I’m ready to strike because I’m fighting for me, my family, and my co-workers,” Isabel Gonzalez, a guest room attendant at the property, added in the statement.
The union represents bartenders, bellmen, cocktail and food servers, cooks, guest room attendants, kitchen workers, and porters.
Though the Culinary Union threated a strike in recent months in Las Vegas, negotiations led to a contract at independent properties and those owned by large companies.
In November, Culinary Union members successfully negotiated with Wynn Resorts, Caesars Entertainment, and MGM Resorts International, averting the threatened strike.
Workers were given a 10% wage increase in the first year of the agreement. They also got 32% in raises over the life of the deal. There were other gains for union members, too.
The last Las Vegas hospitality workers’ strike took place in 2002. That’s when employees walked off the job for 10 days at the Golden Gate in Downtown Las Vegas.
Casino.org reached out to Virgin Las Vegas for comment. No immediate statement was provided.