Friday, June 19, 2026
ADVT 
National

Unionized Workers Launch Walkout At Three Upscale Vancouver Hotels

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Sep, 2019 07:17 PM

    VANCOUVER - Unionized workers at three high-end Vancouver hotels say they have begun strike action to back demands for safe and stable work.

     

    Unite Here Local 40 says workers at the Hyatt Regency, Westin Bayshore and Pinnacle Harbourfront hotels walked out Thursday in what the union describes as an "open-ended strike."

     

    A statement from the union says the walkout is an escalation of job action following a lunch-hour strike on Tuesday.

     

    Room attendants, chefs, front desk agents and other staff are on the picket line at all three hotels.

     

    Unite Here says talks with the hotels have been underway for 14 months without significant movement on issues related to workload, safety and job security.

     

    "Many of the city's hotel workers are struggling to provide for their families with precarious, on-call shifts caused by the systemic cutting of hours in these hotels," the union statement says.

     

    Safety is also a key issue in the dispute, as the union says many workers have complaints about sexual harassment on the job, as well as understaffing that has led to unsafe and unsustainable workloads.

     

    This report by the Canadian Press was first published Sept. 19, 2019

    MORE National ARTICLES

    LNG Canada Project In British Columbia Given Final Approval By Shareholders

    LNG Canada Project In British Columbia Given Final Approval By Shareholders
    Final approval for a massive liquefied natural gas project in northern British Columbia shows that major resource projects can be built in the province, the CEO of LNG Canada said Tuesday.

    LNG Canada Project In British Columbia Given Final Approval By Shareholders

    Suspect Wanted For Passing Off Washers As Toonies In Alleged $30,000 Fraud Case

    Suspect Wanted For Passing Off Washers As Toonies In Alleged $30,000 Fraud Case
    17 Banks In British Columbia Were Defrauded Of More Than $30,000 Over A Three-Month Period By A Suspect 

    Suspect Wanted For Passing Off Washers As Toonies In Alleged $30,000 Fraud Case

    Real Estate Board Reports Metro Vancouver Home Sales Down Sharply

    Real Estate Board Reports Metro Vancouver Home Sales Down Sharply
    The benchmark price for a detached home was $1,540,900, a 4.5 per cent decrease from September 2017 and a 3.4 per cent skid over the last three months.

    Real Estate Board Reports Metro Vancouver Home Sales Down Sharply

    Canadian Cities Consider Drinking In Public Parks Ahead Of Cannabis Legalization

    Canadian Cities Consider Drinking In Public Parks Ahead Of Cannabis Legalization
    "I think a lot of people who want to have a bottle of wine in a public park on a Sunday are probably going to be doing that anyway," said Mitchell Kosny, interim director of Ryerson University's School of Urban and Regional Planning.

    Canadian Cities Consider Drinking In Public Parks Ahead Of Cannabis Legalization

    Toronto Police To Expand Neighbourhood Officer Program Amid Spate Of Shootings

    Toronto's police service is set to expand an existing neighbourhood officer program in an effort to "build trust and reduce crime," but critics say it's unlikely to do either.

    Toronto Police To Expand Neighbourhood Officer Program Amid Spate Of Shootings

    Slide Near Site C Dam In Northeastern B.C. Cuts Road, Prompts Limited Evacuation

    Slide Near Site C Dam In Northeastern B.C. Cuts Road, Prompts Limited Evacuation
    FORT ST. JOHN, B.C. — A landslide in northeastern British Columbia near a gate to the Site C hydroelectric project has damaged a road, isolated a small community and forced the evacuation of two properties.

    Slide Near Site C Dam In Northeastern B.C. Cuts Road, Prompts Limited Evacuation