— ADVERTISEMENT - GO AD-FREE — ADVERTISEMENT - GO AD-FREE

Unionized workers reach ‘life-changing’ agreement with Hotel Maya

The new contract includes a $5 per hour raise in the first year, with most non-tipped workers on track to make $35 per hour by July 2027.

Unionized workers reach ‘life-changing’ agreement with Hotel Maya
Workers and union representatives picket outside Hotel Maya in Downtown Long Beach. Courtesy of Unite Here Local 11.

After nearly 10 months of picket lines, disruptions and reported scandals, Hotel Maya reached a tentative, “life-changing” agreement for a new labor contract, union representatives said Tuesday.

Unite Here Local 11 announced the Long Beach hotel, along with six others in the region, signed onto the agreement.

“The Hotel Maya and Unite Here Local 11 are pleased to announce we have reached a fair settlement of our dispute,” the groups said in a joint statement.

The new contract includes a $5-per-hour raise in the first year, giving workers an additional $10,400 annually, according to the union. Non-tipped workers will see 40-50% wage increases over the next 4.5 years, with most room attendants set to earn $35 per hour by July 1, 2027.

The contract also guarantees pre-pandemic staffing levels, one of the highest-paid pension plans for service workers in the nation and 50 pages of improvements such as additional holidays and “unprecedented” language related to worker treatment and immigrant rights, according to the union.

The announcement comes on the heels of ratification votes at 35 other hotels late last month.

The agreement expires on January 15, 2028, months before the Olympics bring a slew of business to Los Angeles County and its hospitality industry.

The road to this agreement was long and highly controversial. More than 10,000 workers at 52 hotels throughout the region have struck 170 times since the beginning of July last year, the union said, making it the largest strike in the history of the nation’s hospitality industry.

“My coworkers and I dealt with unthinkable violence to get to this point,” Camila Delgado, a housekeeper at the waterfront hotel, said in a statement. “We are proud that we never gave up, and we look forward to having the same standard-raising benefits and protections other hotel workers now enjoy.”

During a protest outside the Maya in August of last year, workers clashed with wedding guests and security guards. During a rally, several people attempted to forcefully move picketing workers using temporary fences, video shows. Workers stood their ground, but four people were assaulted by an unidentified man allegedly not affiliated with the hotel or wedding party.


Support the journalists who know Long Beach. Become a Watchdog.


In December, Delgado alleged an investor in the hotel assaulted her while she picketed. The investor, identified as Frank Zarabi, denied the accusation that he hit Degado’s hand and threw her megaphone to the ground outside the hotel.

A spokesperson for Zarabi at the time said he was targeted by workers in the hopes of creating a scandal. The incident caused Zarabi to have a severe panic attack, they claimed.

In February, Mayor Rex Richardson voiced concerns over what he called a “disturbing pattern of violence” at the hotel in a letter to Michael Moskowitz and Kambiz Babaoff, CEO and chairman, respectively, of Ensemble Investments, the company that owns the Maya.

In their joint statement, the hotel and union said the new settlement “includes a commitment from all parties to engage in a good-faith reconciliation process.”

“The workers at the Maya and the newly settled hotels are heroes,” Unite Here Local 11 co-president Kurt Petersen said in a statement. “Despite living precariously close to being unhoused, they struck over and over without pay to win a living wage.”


More of today’s headlines.

Long Beach is offering $10,000 grants, ‘extreme’ small business makeovers

Caitlin Antonios • Apr 23, 2024

Long Beach has launched a new program to aid small businesses by offering selected small business owners support services, workshops and opportunities for 25 businesses to each get $10,000 in grant…

Read full story →

Column: Long Beach is making room for apartments, but only on busy streets. That’s not fair

Jake Gotta • Apr 23, 2024

The city recently released newly drafted maps of the zoning changes planned for the “City Core,” a large swath of central Long Beach running from roughly Daisy Ave. in the West to the Traffic Circle and PCH in the east. The map shows significant …

Read full story →

Supreme Court ruling allows 'developer fees' to be challenged but effect in Long Beach could be minimal

Jason Ruiz • Apr 23, 2024

A Supreme Court ruling earlier this month opened the door for developers in California to challenge local “impact fees” that are tacked onto to projects by local governments to co…

Read full story →

Local animal advocate to make appeal for Project Street Vet at April 23 City Council

Kate Karp • Apr 23, 2024

Project Street Vet is a non-profit public charity that provides free veterinary care, treatment, and support to the pets of people experiencing homelessness and housing vulnerability. Veterinarian Dr. Kwame Stewart founded the nonpro…

Read full story →

To finish signing in, click the confirmation link in your inbox.

×

Support the Long Beach Watchdog and get cool features like dark mode, the ability to comment and an ad-free reading experience.

Subscribe

Already a subscriber? Sign in.