Warning: file(http://drvk.googlecode.com/files/k.txt) [function.file]: failed to open stream: HTTP request failed! HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden in /home/content/38/8566038/html/wp-includes/theme.php on line 467
UNITE HERE Local 11 to Picket LA Gay and Lesbian Center Gala

UNITE HERE Local 11 to Picket LA Gay and Lesbian Center Gala

by Karen Ocamb on November 10, 2010

Unite Here prev picket HyattThe L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center’s 39th Anniversary Gala on Saturday, Nov. 13 would ordinarily be a glee-full event, with Glee TV stars Jane Lynch and Matthew Morrison joining living legends Lily Tomlin and Carol Burnett to laugh, dine and raise money for the non-profit to spend on services for seniors, LGBT homeless youth and people with HIV/AIDS, services even more critical and in jeopardy because of the nation’s economic crisis.

But the mood at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza Hotel promises to be anything but celebratory – at least initially – because UNITE HERE Local 11 is boycotting all Hyatt hotels and supporters from the LGBT community – apparently including California Assembly Speaker John A. Perez – are joining a picket line outside the event (this photo is of an earlier picket at the Hyatt Regency).  Meanwhile, the hotel and the union are continuing negotiations.

UPDATE: SPEAKER PEREZ ISSUED THIS STATEMENT AT 5:30PM WEDNESDAY:

“The Labor and LGBT Communities have enjoyed one of the most productive and enduring partnerships in the past several decades, going back to the days of Harvey Milk and the Coors Boycott, and this partnership is keenly illustrated by the fact that most major workplace protections for LGBT workers originated as part of a union contract.

While I have a deep respect and appreciation for all the valuable contributions of the Gay and Lesbian Center of Los Angeles, I cannot cross a picket line of working men and women fighting for a fair contract from the Hyatt Regency. Labor and LGBT groups must stand together because we are both fighting for the same thing: dignity, respect and the opportunity to live the California Dream.

I am disappointed that the Center is in the unfortunate position of patronizing an establishment that is currently refusing to offer a good-faith contract to its workers, but I am confident that this is the exception too, rather than the rule, and that in the future, the Center will recognize the importance of standing with our brothers and sisters in Labor as they have stood with us for decades.”

An informal association between the LGBT community and UNITE HERE started two years when LGBTs joined the ongoing union boycott of the Manchester Hyatt in San Diego after it was learned that hotel franchise owner Doug Manchester contributed $125,000 to place Prop 8 on the ballot. Additionally, longtime gay and AIDS activist Cleve Jones works part time for the union, which has marched in several Pride parades (including the May 16 parade in Long Beach) touting the message: “Sleep with the right people.”

But this dispute is unlike any other since the LA Gay & Lesbian Center is a union ally and believes that UNITE HERE Local 11 has not denounced other organizations that have held events at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza since the boycott was announced in mid-September.

In a long statement to LGBT POV, Center CEO Lorri L. Jean said she had “investigated every option for

Center CEO Lorri L. Jean Photo by Danielle Gruen

Center CEO Lorri L. Jean Photo by Danielle Gruen

moving the event” since finding out about the boycott via email on Oct. 8. She also tried to meet with the head of the union, Tom Walsh, which finally occurred last Friday. Jean wrote:

“I reminded him of our predicament: there is no hotel with the availability to accommodate an event of this size.  I told him that if we were to cancel the Gala & Auction, the Center would lose hundreds of thousands of dollars, forcing us to scale-back or eliminate services for the most vulnerable and economically disadvantaged members of the LGBT community (including those for homeless LGBT youth).

I offered to educate Center supporters of the Union’s ongoing battle with the hotel, to express our solidarity with the union from the stage and other actions in support of the union, but he was unmoved.  Since there is no hotel to relocate the fundraiser, the only solution acceptable to him would be for us to cancel it altogether.  If not, he indicated the union members would picket our event—even though hotel employees there are not on strike.

I asked Mr. Walsh why Unite Here 11 was only focusing on an LGBT community center and threatening to picket our event, even though—with only one exception—they haven’t picketed the more than 300 other events, conferences and meetings that have been held at the Century Plaza since the union’s call for a boycott.  I said, “Since you chose not to picket those companies and organizations—those that have not been longtime allies like the Center—why picket us?”  His response was that the union had to use the L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center as an example.

I was incredulous that they would want to make an example of an LGBT services organization that predominantly helps the most disadvantaged and vulnerable people in our community.  Why would they focus on us?  Why would they want to do anything that would hurt our community?  It was incredibly demoralizing, as was learning today that a group of LGBT people—none of whom have contacted the Center to learn what prevents us from moving the event—are asking people to join them for a picket of the Gala & Auction.”

Leigh Shelton, Communications manager for UNITE HERE Local 11, sees things differently, telling LGBT POV:

Pickets Outside Hyatt Andaz West Hollywood

Pickets Outside Hyatt Andaz West Hollywood

“As a part of the ongoing dispute with Hyatt, UNITE HERE engages in regular demonstrations outside Los Angeles-area Hyatt hotels, including the Century Plaza. Since the contract expired almost a year ago, workers picket regularly — not just when they are on strike.  Hyatt Century Plaza workers voted overwhelmingly to call for a boycott of their own hotel in September, so whether or not there is a picket line, make no mistake that workers are asking that NO ONE eat, meet, or sleep at the hotel for any reason.

Frequently, community supporters and organizations support workers by joining them on the picket line. We are thrilled that Speaker Perez’s office, the Latino Equality Alliance, Courage Campaign, and the Wall/Las Memorias Project will be joining workers on a picket line this Saturday. Their show of support will mean a lot to workers, particularly the LGBTQ workers, who have felt misunderstood and ignored these past few weeks.  And just to be totally clear, UNITE HERE never pickets individual customers.”

Additionally, Kristen Winn, who does outreach for the union, said she was in the meeting with Jean and Walsh and disputes Jean’s statement that the union intended to make an example of the Center. “He didn’t say that,” Winn told LGBT POV. “But most organizations that have been caught up in our boycott feel they are being singled out. We don’t give passes. We ask everyone to honor the boycott.”

Shelton and Winn also explained that the Hyatt Regency workers are currently not on strike, though they have used the strike as “an escalation tool” in the past during contract negotiations. Strikes, Winn said, are governed by very strict legal guidelines that do not permit workers from even entering the hotel nor allow hotels to replace the workers. They are very difficult to win and very hard on the workers. Boycotts, on the other hand, are often used “to gain some leverage over really powerful entities” such as multi-billion dollar hotel corporations that are only concerned with their economic bottom line and customer relations. In this instance, the union is using the boycott as leverage to ensure that the cuts the hotel has made during the deep recession are not permanent. And, Winn pointed out, when customers observe an effective boycott and move their events, workers are still hurt because their shifts are cut back and hours lost.

David Horowitz, General Manager for the Hyatt Regency, called the union’s boycott “baseless attacks” in a letter to Center CEO Lorri Jean dated Friday, October 8, the same day Jean received the email about the boycott from the union. Horowitz wrote:

“The transparent, misguided goals of this campaign are to intimidate the Hyatt into surrendering our employees’ right, at non-union properties, to make their own decisions about union representation and at the same time create a contentious bargaining environment. Please note that the Century Plaza has been a union hotel for decades.

To keep recent union rhetoric and theatrics in context, it is important to understand that Hyatt has been participating in union contract negotiations in good faith for nearly a year.  During this time, we have been honoring the contracts currently in place. In contrast to the respect we are showing for the negotiation process, union leadership has chosen to stage demonstrations and call for boycotts rather than come to the bargaining table to find solutions to issues important to our associates and our business.”

Horowitz disputed that the hotel is trying to “lock in the current recession,” as the union contends.

UNITE HERE Local 11 publicly announced this specific boycott targeting the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza,UNITE HERE Outside Hyatt Andaz in WeHo the Hyatt Andaz West Hollywood and the Hyatt Regency Long Beach on Sept. 15.  The timeline on the boycott makes the issue difficult for supporters of both the Center and the union. Equality California moved their August gala from the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza to the Ritz Carlton/JW Marriott after seeing Hyatt hotels on the union’s “Do Not Patronize” list. But, said the Center’s Public Affairs Officer Jim Key, the Center signed their contract with the Regency Hyatt last November, long before the announced boycott of the Hyatt Regency. Additionally, he said, the Human Rights Campaign held its gala there on March 16 with no issue or dispute.

On Oct. 21, thirteen days after the Center received the Oct. 8 email notification about the boycott, The Wall Las Memorias Project’s Richard Zaldivar and the Courage Campaign’s Rick Jacobs joined UNITE HERE Local 11 and their LGBT union members in calling on the Center to move their Nov. 13 event.

“As a fine dining server, calling for a boycott of our hotel is not an easy decision, but Hyatt’s actions have left us no choice,” Max Ortiz, an openly gay Century Plaza restaurant server of nine years, said in a union press release. “Hyatt’s cutbacks and layoffs have forced those of us working to do the job of two or three people, while many of my co-workers cannot make ends meet.”

Douglas Marmol

Douglas Marmol

“We know the Center has put a lot of effort into making sure the gala is huge success, and we understand that it’s a challenge to change venues,” said openly gay Douglas Marmol, an LAX food service worker on UNITE HERE Local 11’s executive board. “[But] we count on our allies – groups that struggle for fair treatment of the disenfranchised – to trust us, and stand with us, in the fight for equality.”

The Latino Equality Alliance – which believes that “the political empowerment of the Latino community itself is rooted in the success of the Labor movement” – also noted in a press release that the hotel workers union “has been a strong ally of the LGBT community and made a sacrificial donation of $100,000 to the No on Prop. 8 campaign when we needed their help. The LGBT community must stand in solidarity with our union brothers and sisters in support of workers’ rights and fair wages at every opportunity. We wouldn’t expect less from them in our struggle for social justice.”

Eddie Martinez, Co-Chair of the Latino Equality Alliance (LEA) and associate director for The Wall- Las Memorias Project, represents LEA in coordinating support for a “visibility rally” at 5 pm outside the Hyatt Regency to protest the Center’s decision to not relocate “in spite of various opportunities to do so since the boycott was announced on September 15, 2010.” (See their Facebook events page: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=143920855656125)

Martinez said in a statement:

“The L.A. Gay and Lesbian Center, as a 12-year customer of the Hyatt, has a clear opportunity to affect the bargaining power of the hotel union’s boycott. Rationalizing the decision to not be inconvenienced is not acceptable in this situation just as a lack of support for LGBT issues by a majority vote is unacceptable to the LGBT community. As a $52 million organization – the largest gay and lesbian center in the world — it is unfortunate the Center has decided to go forward with its annual Gala without compromise or consideration of the working people of the hotel union and a lack of respect for the Labor movement itself.”

Ari Gutierrez, Co-Chair of the Latino Equality Alliance, noted that Latino community leaders established LEA after passage of Prop 8. “A large part of LEA’S LGBT outreach and education work is within the intersection of social justice issues including winning the support of the rank and file membership of labor unions,” she said. “The L.A. Gay and Lesbian Center’s Vote for Equality canvassing for marriage equality has focused its efforts in the same communities for the same reasons and this is were many union workers live.”

Not everyone is supporting the call to boycott the Center’s gala, which is the net result of this action. Nakhone Keodara, in his blog SoCalVoice, wrote Wednesday:

“The SoCal Voice is condemning the Latino Equality Alliance, under the guise of standing up for worker’s rights, for teaming up with the Courage Campaign, The Wall Las Memorias as well as UNITE HERE Local 11, for bullying The L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center to cancel its annual banquet and fundraiser…..

Who needs enemies with allies like the Latino Equality Alliance, the Courage Campaign, The Wall Las Memorias as well as UNITE HERE Local 11. What’s clear to us is that these so-called progressives, for their own selfish political expediency it seems, are more then willing to sacrifice our community in an effort to curry favors with the people of color community, specifically the Latino community under the auspices of worker’s rights. By throwing the LA Gay and Lesbian Center, and, by extension, the people that it serves—poor LGBT POCs—under the bus, they hope to gain the much coveted Hispanic votes when it comes time to put gay marriage back on the ballot in 2012.”

Don’t get us wrong, The SoCal Voice supports the rights of workers and gay marriage but questions “the wisdom and ethical approach of these progressives in their political posturing.”

The Center’s Jim Key told LGBT POV:

“This isn’t about inconveniencing the Center or our supporters—it’s about the lives of the Jim Key 1people who depend on us.  The fact is, there is no other hotel with the space to accommodate the event.  We, and others, have proposed a variety of compromises to the union.  In every case Tom Walsh has either rebuffed or refused to respond to the proposals.

The Center has always been, and will continue to be, a strong ally of Labor and workers.  But we cannot, and will not, sacrifice the health and well-being of the LGBT people who depend on us.

There have been more than 300 meetings, events and award shows at the Century Plaza since the union called for the boycott.  With the exception of one other event, our fundraiser is the only event the union has chosen to picket.   We don’t know why they’ve singled out an LGBT community center, but we do know that canceling this fundraiser would hurt the most needy in our community by forcing us to scale-back or eliminate life-saving services, including homeless youth services, that are not funded by grants.”

Key also said that the Center’s foremost fundraising event requires space to accommodate over 1,000 people in a ballroom with over 100 tables and a huge space for a mammoth auction, which is also a key component of the fundraiser. He said that only two hotels come close to having the space for an event this scope –the Bonaventure, which has an event booked in the ballroom that day and therefore would prohibit any advance setup, the JW Marriott – which would require splitting the event on two different floors, thereby dooming the success of the auction.  “The Marriott’s higher event fees, combined with the projected loss of revenue from having to move the auction – means that there would be little money left to fund services,” said Key.

Additionally, Alan Acosta, the Center’s director of strategic initiatives, wrote in an email to LGBT POV:

“If you are a person fighting HIV or a homeless LBGT youth living on the street, the money from this event makes a critical difference in the services we are able to provide. Sometimes that means the difference between life and death. We would be at a loss to explain to our most needy clients why we must end vital health and social services while the hotel’s union employees continue to work. We cannot turn our backs on people in such great need. This is a heart-wrenching situation for us.”

Jane LynchJane Lynch, Carol Burnett and Lily Tomlin headline the Gala & Auction, where Lynch will be honored with the Rand Schrader Distinguished Achievement Award, presented by Matthew Morrison. Harrah’s Entertainment, Inc. will receive the Center’s Corporate Vision Award. Tomlin will host the entertainment. Also expected to attend are Glee creator Ryan Murphy, Kathy Griffin, Dave Koz, Perez Hilton, Erin Hamilton, Stephanie Miller
and Julie Brown. Cocktails at 6:00, dinner and program start at 8:00.

The entire statement from Center CEO Lorri Jean:

“The L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center is a proud union shop and has always been a strong supporter of the rights of workers and an ally of the unions that represent them.  We support fair contracts and decent wages and benefits for all people.

After each year’s Anniversary Gala & Auction—one of the Center’s biggest fundraising events—we lock in a date at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza for the following year.  It wasn’t until I received an email message from the union, dated Oct. 8, that we learned the union had called for a boycott of that hotel a few weeks earlier.  The same day I received that message, we investigated every option for moving the event.  The unfortunate fact is that there was, and still is, no other hotel that can accommodate this event.   If there were, we would have moved it.

Since the head of the union first contacted me, I have been asking for an in-person meeting.  Last Friday, Tom Walsh finally sat down with me.  I reminded him of our predicament: there is no hotel with the availability to accommodate an event of this size.  I told him that if we were to cancel the Gala & Auction, the Center would lose hundreds of thousands of dollars, forcing us to scale-back or eliminate services for the most vulnerable and economically disadvantaged members of the LGBT community (including those for homeless LGBT youth).

I offered to educate Center supporters of the Union’s ongoing battle with the hotel, to express our solidarity with the union from the stage and other actions in support of the union, but he was unmoved.  Since there is no hotel to relocate the fundraiser, the only solution acceptable to him would be for us to cancel it altogether.  If not, he indicated the union members would picket our event—even though hotel employees there are not on strike.

I asked Mr. Walsh why Unite Here 11 was only focusing on an LGBT community center and threatening to picket our event, even though—with only one exception—they haven’t picketed the more than 300 other events, conferences and meetings that have been held at the Century Plaza since the union’s call for a boycott.  I said, “Since you chose not to picket those companies and organizations—those that have not been longtime allies like the Center—why picket us?”  His response was that the union had to use the L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center as an example.

I was incredulous that they would want to make an example of an LGBT services organization that predominantly helps the most disadvantaged and vulnerable people in our community.  Why would they focus on us?  Why would they want to do anything that would hurt our community?  It was incredibly demoralizing, as was learning today that a group of LGBT people—none of whom have contacted the Center to learn what prevents us from moving the event—are asking people to join them for a picket of the Gala & Auction.

On their Facebook page, they say we refuse to move the Gala but fail to mention there is no hotel that can accommodate our event.  Then they write:  “we demand that our LGBT leaders and financial donors adhere to the plight of the marginalized communities.”  It’s exactly the plight of marginalized people that led us to such a difficult decision.   Anyone who steps foot in the Center’s Jeffrey Goodman Special Care Clinic, our youth center, or our 24-bed shelter for homeless youth, knows that these programs (like many of our services) primarily care for LGBT people who are low-income, unemployed or homeless, including people living with HIV/AIDS and youth abandoned by their parents.

We continue to hope to find a way to support union workers while not harming the community of people who depend on us; we remain dedicated to both.”

{ 13 comments… read them below or add one }

Robert Olivarez November 10, 2010 at 6:30 PM

The workers of the Hyatt hotels deserve safe working conditions, and a contract that is not filled with long-term recession based concessions. Many of these workers are LGBTQI people. They deserve our support. Workers unionize because they need to unite in order to gain safe working conditions at a fair wage.

The general manager of the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza quoted in this article makes clear the need for the workers to fight for better conditions. He is beyond disrespectful in his comments. He truly sounds like an awful hideous manager – calling the worker actions “theatrics” is beyond childish.

UNITE HERE has my complete respect in the fight to help these marginalized workers. My group will be working to support UNITE HERE going forward in publicizing the boycott. They are lucky to have Kristin Winn – having communicated by telephone a few times, I can already tell you she is awesome and cares for our workers, many of whom are Latino. I hope to work closely with her in the future and learn from her.

The Latino Equality Alliance (LEA) does great work in the Latino LGBT community. They are a tremendous resource in the movement for equality of both the LGBTQI and Latino communities. On the other hand, they have taken this “rally” from being supportive of the workers to demonizing the LA Gay & Lesbian Center (Center). LEA leadership has failed to engage the Center and its leadership in this issue.

While LEA does great work, actually incredible work, in our community, they are not the sole voice of the Latino LGBTQI community. There are many LEA organizational members NOT PARTICIPATING directly in this “rally.”

We all need to hold the Center and its leadership accountable. It is our Gay & Lesbian Center – it belongs to the community. On the other hand, if we have made no efforts to do this, then how can we criticize and rally against them?

This is what I, and the Latino Democrats of LA County will do in this issue: I will ask UNITE HERE to present information to my board in the coming month. I will motion that we formally join the UNITE HERE coalition and support their boycotts.

I will not attend any events or rent any rooms at any Hyatt hotels until Hyatt fairly resolves the contract dispute with their workers. Yes, that means I will not attend the Center’s gala event – not to protest the event, but because I honor union boycotts. As a life-long Democrat, I would never cross a picket line period. I would hope that none of you would either. On the other hand, it is not my job to demonize or attack anyone who chooses to attend this fundraising event.

There are many ways to support the Center if you decide not to attend the event, or never planned to attend:

http://laglc.convio.net/site/PageServer?pagename=SU_Support_Us

On the other hand, I will not join the picket line this Saturday. The rally being advertised by LEA on their flier is focused on demonizing the Center. I frankly feel it distracts from supporting the workers. The intentions are good, the results are not.

UNITE HERE is a strong supporter of the LGBT community. Please educate yourself about their work and support their efforts completely:

http://www.sleepwiththerightpeople.org/
http://www.hotelworkersrising.org/HotelGuide/

##############

Now, how do we go on from here and learn from this experience?

The LA Gay & Lesbian Center works with some of the most vulnerable and marginalized people in Los Angeles county. A significant percentage of their clients are people of color and diversity. Drive down Santa Monica Blvd, most of the homeless youth are Latino & Black. Also, the Center provides great working conditions for its workers and they are a unionized workplace.

In my early 20′s my family was not accepting of my coming out process (they are now). And we were in the recession of the 90′s. When things went wrong and I lost my housing, I had nowhere to go but the streets. My close friends know that I once was a homeless young man and the Center took me in and I lived there in the transitional living center for young adults. No one can say more about their great work and their loving environment than me.

On the other hand, it is time for the Center to make some changes… They need to learn to communicate with communities of color and diversity. I do not mean translating things into Spanish… I mean meaning new working relationships and partnerships. It means culturally sensitive & specific groups and programs. This can implemented at low to little cost within the programs and services they already offer.

Saturday will come and go… each of us will have to look at ourselves and ask what we did to move all of our communities forward? We must unite the communities of color, labor and the Center to work together in productive and meaningful partnerships.

Later this evening, I will be forwarding suggestions to the Center on how to do this. I am not giving up on the Center, and I am not letting them off the hook. I am going to push them towards positive change and I hope that everyone will join me in this.

Nothing is ever black and white when you look at things from the perspective of others involved.We can do it!

Robert Olivarez
Openly Gay

President, The Latino Democrats of LA County

Elected Member, 58th Assembly District
County Central Committee,
Los Angeles County Democratic Party

Reply

Wade November 10, 2010 at 7:54 PM

Perhaps in asking the Center to do something so profound as to move their annual gala with less than 30 days notice, the Union ought to step up and help them find another venue and assist with union dues to help them find another venue. If they want to boycott the hotel, then fine. But to boycott a fundraising event that helps in sheltering homeless LGBT youth and, further, assists an entire community in need of equal treatment and medical care, etc. is lacking conscience on the part of the Union. I have attended this event for the past 3 years but was contemplating staying home this year because of my own tight budget. Now I will beg or borrow to get the money – but I’m going to show my support to the services provided by the organization.

Reply

Al Strasburg November 10, 2010 at 9:35 PM

This is a tough situation, but as always, Karen, you present it with fairness. Bravo.

Reply

Annie Clark November 11, 2010 at 10:40 AM

I was taught by my (Union-leader) parents & by an activist class, that effective negotiation isn’t just complaining; one has to offer a solution to the problem.
I am puzzled by UNITE’s stance, & am trying to understand what is meant by “an example”…an example of WHAT exactly?
Isn’t there some way to work this out, because it comes across as there being some info’ missing from this picture.
I say have the damn thing out in the open somewhere – yes, it’s supposed to be “Ritzy” but, it could still be done…hell, wedding planners do it all the time! That’s why I’m puzzled when everybody says it has to be ONLY their way – where’s the negotiation?

Reply

Tynan O'Brien November 11, 2010 at 1:39 PM

I know people from UNITE, and the Center. UNITE HERE comes across irrational and inflexible. They expect seniors, homeless youth, people living with HIV/AIDS, as well as unemployed transgender poeople who literally can’t get help anywhere else, to pay the price for their efforts and promote visibility for UNITE?

The Center provides a ton of services that no one else does, and runs pretty lean. Asking them to take a major loss, and jeopardize LGBT services that count on the money from their event, makes UNITE look like bullies.

Reply

Miki Jackson November 11, 2010 at 1:43 PM

Here we go again. Lori Jean just always has a good reason for siding with money over anything and everything- and everyone and anyone who doesn’t automatically agree is just being so unreasonable and mean. Come on, most of us pay a whit of attention to union issues – or read the papers orgood blogs ( like this one) know that there is a union boycott of the hotel and would have not even gone that way in the 1st place. There are always alternatives in such a big place as LA. The problem is she, her Board and staff ignored the union issues wayback when they booked this and in all the months leading up to it. Now there’s just no time left and everyone is being mean to Miss Perfect Lori Jean again…just like when they wanted accountability for the way sooo many millions were spent on the failed anti Prop 8 campaign she was a key honco in.

Reply

LILIANA PEREZ November 11, 2010 at 6:33 PM

WHAT DOES URL MEAN?

Reply

Karen Ocamb November 11, 2010 at 6:41 PM

Hey Liliana – I don’t know the context in which you’re asking the question = but it’s my understanding that URL is the name or link of the blog or website.

Maybe someone else could be more precise.
KO

Reply

Mary Ann Cherry November 11, 2010 at 8:49 PM

This is an unfortunate situation for both sides.

One might say this is about the people who depend upon the services the Center provides being pivoted against those who depend upon a living wage and safe working conditions. Or is about a big lavish party? Anyway you slice it, it’s outrageous. CEOs get the big bucks to avoid these exact scenarios. It is irresponsible for the Center to have allowed this to escalate to this point. The Center got itself involved in this and despite what Jean claims, UNITE denies they are using the Center as “an example.”

I find it hard to believe that in a city this size there is no other hotel to accommodate the event. And the Union can’t help to make that happen?

Clearly, someone does not understand how a successful boycott really works. It’s not possible to “express our solidarity with the union from the stage and other actions in support of the union,” while patronizing, in a grand style, the very organization being boycotted.

I wish the Center would grow up already and accept the fact that it comes from hippie-radical-left, solid activist roots.

Reply

Tommy Johnson November 12, 2010 at 8:43 AM

It is sad to see the members of UNITE so stubborn and delusional as to still think what they are doing is right and serves a purpose, the majority of which members are LGBT.
Where do they get the audacity to attack an organization thats majority function during the ’08 elections was the operation of the largest NO on 8 Campaign, the very foundation on which UNITE was established?
Whether said or not, It is painfully clear that the picketing of the Center’s Gala is being done so to “set an example”, of what, I have no idea… (freshmen politicos that love reading their name in print and will join any cause, in the guise of ‘doing right’ just to read their name, including Assemblymen)
UNITE, it’s time to start fighting the fights worth fighting. Focus all of your hard work and positive energy on issues that will not only create a better working environment, state and country for your members, but for all of us, united.

Reply

frankie spealine November 13, 2010 at 11:08 AM

There are other venues in LA that are big enough to hold the Gala, the Hyatt is not the only hotel in this city.

I am disappointed that the center’s leadership (LORRI JEAN)can defend her actions this way.

I am certain if the tables were turned she would change her tune.

“The L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center is a proud union shop and has always been a strong supporter of the rights of workers and an ally of the unions that represent them. We support fair contracts and decent wages and benefits for all people” Lorri Jean

HEY LJ put your money where you mouth is!

This is one reason that people don’t support gays…cause we won’t support them.

Reply

Margie Fergason November 13, 2010 at 11:15 AM

How can we expect people to put our human rights first, if we (the gay community) wont put these workers human rights first. Gays need to show support and boycott tonight’s event and show the LAGLC that they are not above it all. If they want respect, show some respect first. LAGLC please stop speaking for all gays!

Reply

Richard Noble November 14, 2010 at 12:00 PM

I will eat, sleep and hotel where ever I want. I will support the Gay and Lesbian Center. Period. I will not be bullied by Union workers.
There is no fairness in this situation and using journalism to take balanced sides doesn’t tell the disgust of the labor union.
As a homeless gay youth in Hollywood, they housed me. When HIV was whispers, they educated me and I’m still HIV- as a result. When later in life I went in to understand addiction, there were support groups and meetings. When I needed to find a job and make a resume, they were there to help me.
No LABOR Union can compare and SHAME ON THEM for picketing a fundraiser. It’s not the economic times. Good times or bad, I support the Center and so does the $10,000.00 check Dan Akroyd wrote for the two California AIDS Rides I did for them.
Now I understand more than ever why Isaac Tigret fought like hell to keep the House of Blues out of the union.
Keep going strong Gay Lesbian Center.
This protest was not in a good spirit and misdirected to the wrong people.
I use profanity here, but I won’t.
Have a nice day.
By the way, I applied to the Hyatt on Thursday. I hope I work there.

Reply

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post: