Hotel Workers Stiffed Millions In Wages, Lawsuit Alleges

Housekeepers

More than a dozen low-level hotel workers in Indianapolis have filed a class-action lawsuit against ten of the city’s hotels and a labor staffing agency, claiming they were routinely cheated out of pay with the knowledge of hotel management.

The workers — most of them Hispanic immigrants employed as housekeepers, dishwashers and bussers — say they were forced to work off the clock and through their unpaid breaks, sometimes pushing their earnings below the minimum wage of $7.25 per hour. The suit could potentially involve more than a thousand workers and millions of dollars in claims, according to the hotel workers union UNITE HERE, which is organizing workers in Indianapolis.

The employees named in the suit worked for a labor agency called Hospitality Staffing Solutions (HSS), which provides lower-rung workers to hotel companies like Hyatt on a temporary basis in cities across the country. On its website, HSS declares itself  a client’s “secret weapon for improving service while cutting costs — 12% annually, on average.”

HuffPost report in August chronicled how the outsourcing of work to HSS has led to a two-class system within certain hotels, as lesser-paid agency workers toil alongside better-compensated direct hires. Several Indianapolis hotel workers told HuffPost then that the agency shorted them on their wages and threatened them with dismissal if they couldn’t finish their work in the allotted time. The CEO of HSS said at the time that any instances of unpaid wages were honest mistakes and that the company took the allegations seriously.

Management at Georgia-based HSS could not immediately be reached for comment. This isn’t the first time the company has been sued by workers. A former manager in Pittsburgh once filed a lawsuit claiming he was fired because he stood up for housekeepers who weren’t being paid what they were owed. The company has also been criticized for an advertisement  it ran in a hotel trade publication that showed tiny workers inside a vending machine, apparently ready for purchase.

The HSS-staffed hotels named in the Indianapolis lawsuit include Embassy Suites, Marriott, Westin, Hyatt, Holiday Inn and Omni properties.

Martha Gonzalez, 28, one of the workers now suing, tells HuffPost she worked at Hyatt and Marriott properties as an HSS employee earning the minimum wage. She says that she was required to come in early and prepare her housekeeping cart before punching in, and that she often wound up working through her lunch break or clocking out to finish work at the end of the day, to avoid being punished. She says she quit last summer.

“I was sick of getting a check that didn’t meet my family’s needs,” Gonzalez, who’s from Mexico, says through a translator. “Every check was just too small. I was so tired of working in a place under pressure, getting calls from the manager, ‘Are you finished? Are you finished?’”

Plaintiff Anastasia Amantecatl, who worked for HSS as a housekeeper at a Marriott, claims that she was compelled to show up two hours before her shift actually started each day. “This was necessary for her to complete her required number of rooms for the day,” the lawsuit states. “She was not compensated for this time nor was she paid the required overtime premium for this time.” The lawsuit alleges that between 20 and 25 housekeepers found themselves in a similar situation at the hotel.

Many hotel workers in Indianapolis have told HuffPost that their workloads have increased in recent years as their wages have remained flat or even gone down. Workers and their advocates partly blame the outsourcing of previously in-house jobs for deteriorating work conditions.

A hotel company can save money by shifting some of its workforce to a company like HSS, since it would no longer be responsible for providing costly worker benefits. But workers employed by labor agencies are technically temps, sometimes going years on end without receiving health coverage or pay raises. Similar temp outsourcing has become widespread in the warehousing and logistics industries, where many workers blame the temp model for their low wages and lack of benefits.

Officials with UNITE HERE argue that the outsourcing at hotels has hidden costs for the city and state, such as the taxpayer-funded health care that many agency workers’ families end up using. “I don’t think the taxpayers of Indianapolis should be the ones to subsidize these workers because these corporations don’t want to [provide] living wages and benefits,” Becky Smith, a union organizer, told HuffPost last summer.

Salvador Perez, a 38-year-old father of two from Mexico, is also named in the hotel lawsuit. He says that he worked for HSS for the last few months of 2011, earning the $7.25 minimum wage as a dishwasher. He claims he would regularly work a 40-hour week but end up being paid only for 35. He says he’s suing with his colleagues to recover back wages and “end the exploitation that’s happening at hotels downtown.”

“We struggled to pay for diapers for our baby,” Perez says. “We had to go to food pantries and churches to feed our families. They always said, ‘It’ll come with the next check, it’ll come with the next check.’ But it didn’t.”

Hungry Tri-Fest fans might need umbrella: Breakfast Lions Club event gets going today at lunch hour

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The weather forecast isn’t looking that great for today’s opening of the 24th-annual Tri-Fest hosted by the Henderson Breakfast Lions Club, so keep an eye on the skies.

Friday’s high temperature is forecast at 67 degrees with an 80 percent chance for precipitation. Thunderstorms also are forecast.

If inclement weather should cancel tonight’s Tri-Fest fireworks show, which is set to take place at 9 p.m. on the riverfront, it will be rescheduled for 9 p.m. Saturday.

The festival, which runs through Sunday, is packed with activities including food booths, carnival rides, live music and other entertainment, athletic competitions, a poker run, canned food drive and socializing.

Here is the schedule:

Today

(All music events on Central Park stage)

n 11 a.m. — Food booths open along Main Street

n Noon — Carnival rides open along Main Street

n 5:30-6:15 p.m. — Music: The Vincent Brothers

n 7-8:45 p.m. — Music: Karl Shiflett & Big Country Show

n 7-8:30 p.m. — Henderson Tennis Club Spring Swing, Water Street Tennis Complex. Ages: 4-14. Sign-up deadline: Thursday, April 14, Jennifer Holland at jholland_htc@hotmail.com.

n 9 p.m. — Fireworks show, downtown riverfront.

n 9:30-10 p.m. — Music: Karl Shiflett & Big Country Show

Saturday

n 7 a.m. — Registration opens, Breakfast Lions Club/American Red Cross Town & Country Bike Ride (distances of 12 miles, 36 miles or 62.5 miles, Audubon Mill Park, staggered start between 7-8:30 a.m.; Registration forms available at the Red Cross or www.hendersontrifest.org.

n 9 a.m. — 21st-Annual Breakfast Lions Club/Habitat for Humanity 5K Classic Run & Walk, Central Park (Elm Street side). Information/registration: www.hendersonhabitat.org. Entry fee is $20 per individual or a team rate of $15 each for teams of eight or more by the early registration deadline of Monday, April 11.

n 9 a.m. — Breakfast Lions Club/New Hope Animal Rescue 4th-Annual Tri-Fest Poker Run, Ohio Valley Financial Group Parking Lot. Entry fee is $10 per hand. Sign-up information is available at www.hendersontrifest.org, or you can call Donald Ploss at 826-5137. Sign-in time is 9 a.m. and starting time is 10 a.m. Last bike out is 11:30 a.m. and last bike in is 2:30 p.m. First place is $300.

n 10 a.m. — Henderson County UK Alumni/Christian Community Outreach Canned Food Drive, Central Park.

n 10 a.m. — Henderson County Lady Colonels Softball Tournament. Location: North Middle School softball field. Games: 10 a.m. — Evansville Mater Dei vs. Henderson Co.; Noon — Greenwood High School vs. Terre Haute South; 2 p.m. — Runner-up game; 4 p.m. — Championship game.

n Noon — Volunteer and Information Center Cornhole Tournament, Central Park, registration starts at 11 a.m. There is a discount for early registration (prior to day of tournament.) Entry fee is $25 (non-refundable) before April 16 and $30 the day of tournament. Prizes will be awarded to winners, first runners-up and second runners-up. For information, contact VIC at 831-2273.

n 11 a.m. — Food booths open along Main Street

n 11 a.m. — Elementary School Competition, Central Park

n Noon — Carnival rides open along Main Street

n Noon — Tri-State International Brotherhood of Magicians — Ring 56, Central Park, Main Stage

n 1-1:30 p.m. — David Taylor Puppet Show, Central Park, Main Stage

n 1:30 p.m. — Elvis Competition, Semi-Final Round, Central Park, Main Stage

n 3:15-3:45 p.m. — Music: Ray Ligon

n 4:30 p.m. — Elvis Competition, Final Round, Central Park, Main Stage

n 5:15-5:45 p.m. — Music: Theresa Flahardy

n 5:30-6:30 p.m. — Rawhide & Ruffles Western Dancers, Intersection, Second & Main

n 6-7 p.m. — Music: Blend

n 7:30-10 p.m. — Music: The Duke Boys

Sunday

n 10 a.m. — Community Church Service hosted by Niagara United Methodist Church with Pastor Rick Nollmann, Central Park, Main Stage

n Noon — Food booths, carnival rides open along Main Street

n 1:30-2:30 p.m. — American Heart Association Jump Rope for Heart, Ohio Valley Financial Group Parking Lot

n 1-1:45 p.m. — Music: The Vocalystics

n 2-2:45 p.m. — Music: River City

n 3-3:30 p.m. — Music: Morgan Book

 

Weight Loss Doctor Told Patients Sex With Him Would Burn Calories, cops say

View more videos at: http://nbcphiladelphia.com.

 

 

A Conshohocken weight loss doctor used his hands or a foreign object to penetrate patients, telling one victim, “If you have an orgasm, that would burn 200 calories,” according to court documents obtained by NBC Philadelphia.

“A number of [the victims] used the word ‘creepy’ to describe his conduct,” Montgomery County District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman said in a press conference Monday.

Dr. Arie Oren, who works at Conshohocken Weight Control at 100 West 3rd Avenue, was arrested on multiple counts of aggravated indecent assault after several female patients reported to police that Oren inappropriately touched them during weight loss sessions between September and December 2010, according to Ferman.

One victim told police that Oren told her, “You’re getting an extra special treat for losing all the weight,” and he then used a massager on her genitals, according to court documents.

Another victim told police that the 64-year-old doctor grabbed her breasts. Yet another victim said that the doctor sexually assaulted her, and when she protested, he unbuttoned his pants and said, “If you need a man, I’m a man,” according to court documents.

“For a woman to go to a doctor like this, looking for help with weight loss — which is such a personal matter — and to then have the doctor touch her sexually…is really a complete betrayal of what the doctor is supposed to be doing,” Ferman said.

Oren is a convicted felon who served prison time in the late 1990s for an insurance fraud scheme, according to authorities.

He was released after posting $100,000 cash bail following his arraignment Monday afternoon.

The District Attorney’s Office believes there may be more women who were victim to Oren’s abuse and Ferman hopes they will come forward.

 

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A Peek At Beast’s Castle At Disney World’s New Fantasyland

A Peek At Beast’s Castle At Disney World’s New Fantasyland

New Fantasyland - Disney World

If you’ve been to the Magic Kingdom at Disney World in Florida recently, you’ve seen that the Fantasyland area is under heavy construction — that’s because the area is currently undergoing a major expansion that will nearly double the size of the original Fantasyland.

One of the main objectives of the expansion is to add a whole bunch of new Beauty and the Beast-themed attractions, eateries, and architecture, including Beast’s Castle!

Check out the image here below, via Disney Parks Blog, that provides a sneak peek of Beast’s Castle, which will house the Be Our Guest restaurant, scheduled to open in late 2012. The restaurant is said to “offer a lavish dining experience in the castle’s elegant ballroom, gallery and mysterious “west-wing.” Eventually, other Beauty and the Beast-themed buildings will open around the Castle, like Gaston’s Tavern, Bonjour! Village Gifts, and the cottage of Belle’s father, Maurice. And of course, there will be a meet-and-greet with Belle and her friends.

Along with the Beauty and the Beast additions, the expansion will also include new attractions for Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, The Little Mermaid, and Dumbo, as well as Princess Fairytale Hall, the new home for Disney Princesses like Aurora, Cinderella, Tiana, Rapunzel, and more.

The new Fantasyland is scheduled to be completed some time in 2013.Mouse Steps caught some video of the construction of Beast’s Castle, which you can view here below.

Beauty and the Beast is one of my favorite Disney movies (as evidenced by the many themed snowglobes I own), so I, for one, am super-excited for the new Fantasyland and all it has in store for visitors to the theme park.

Image

Beast's Castle

5 shot, including a child, in SE Side drive-by

5 shot in SE Side drive-by

Five people were wounded, including a child, during a drive-by shooting Tuesday night on the Southeast Side, according to Chicago police.

A 10-year-old child was taken to an area hospital after being shot in the foot, police said, citing preliminary information. Another victim, an adult, was shot in the head and taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn.

The shooting happened about 9 p.m. at East 79th Street and South Escanaba Avenue in the South Chicago neighborhood.

Police said the barbecue was held in honor of a gang member who was shot to death last year.

Former Columbus County sheriff dies at the age of 70

A former Columbus County sheriff and founding board member of the county’s fair has died.

Jimmy Parker Ferguson, 70, of Chadbourn passed away on Wednesday, April 6 at his residence.

According to a press release, Ferguson was elected the Columbus County sheriff in 1994 and served for two terms. He was also reportedly a veteran serving in the National Guard and had retired from the North Carolina Department of Motor Vehicles after 30 years of service in 1991.

Ferguson was a founding board member of the Columbus County Fair and served as the president for several years. In 2004, he was the recipient of the “Holmes-McBride Memorial Award,” for his dedication to serving humanity after 38 years of law enforcement.

A visitation will be from 7-9 p.m. on Saturday, April 9 at Worthington Funeral Home in Chadbourn. Funeral services are expected to be held at 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 10 at Chadbourn Baptist Church. Rev. C.F. McDowell, III will officiate. Interment will be held Monday at Leesville Baptist Church Cemetery, located at 13305 Leesville Church Road in Raleigh.

Memorials can be made to the Jimmy Ferguson Fair Scholarship by mailing P.O. Box 457, Whiteville, NC 28472 or to the Lower Cape Fear Hospice at 206 Warrior Trail Road, Whiteville, 28472.

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