Protest means to
bolster effort to bring union to Crowne
Plaza.
Alex Shebar
Staff writer
(July 18, 2007) — Rochester hotel workers,
clergy and members of the
community will gather for a rally outside the
Crowne Plaza Hotel on
Thursday to mark one year of calling for a
union.
For Rev. Marlowe Washington, pastor of
the Baber A.M.E. Church
in Rochester, the rally will also be a
celebration as the clergy will
present about 3,000 signatures in support of
the workers.
Washington is a founding member of
Rochester Clergy and Laity
United for Economic Justice — C.L.U.E. With
Hotel Workers Rising, a
national movement, the organization is urging
Crowne Plaza Hotel to
allow workers to form a union.
"We want to let the workers decide (to
form a union), not the
union, not the management, not the preachers,
just the workers,"
Washington said. "They have the right to
assemble."
Employees are fighting against the
hotel's low wages, high
health insurance costs, amount of unpaid
overtime and other injustices,
said Tracey Smith, p.m. supervisor and hotel
housekeeper for the Crowne
Plaza.
The fight is with Crowne Plaza owner
Tzong-Jer Wei and general
manager Paul Kremp. While Crowne Plaza is a
chain, hotels are sold as
individual franchises and it's up to the owners
to unionize.
C.L.U.E. officials said they have tried
to meet with the management without
success.
In
an interview, Kremp denied the allegations
against the hotel. "They
have the right to choose a position that they
wish. Our employees are
not being intimidated," Kremp said. "We've had
an open-door policy at
all times."
Smith and Jason Crane, organizing
director for the Rochester
regional joint board of UNITE HERE, disputed
Kremp's assertions. They
said Kremp had purposely "locked his door."
"We don't believe our employees need a
union and we don't believe the union really
understands our business," Kremp
said.
Kremp said that it is a minority
of staff members pushing for a union.
ASHEBAR@DemocratandChronicle.com