Workers picket outside Atlantic City casino, seeking raises

Workers picket outside Atlantic City casino, seeking raises

SeattlePI.com

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ATLANTIC CITY, N.J,. (AP) — Hundreds of Atlantic City casino workers picketed outside the Tropicana on Wednesday, as the union for employees at nine casinos is pushing for a new contract giving them a share of gambling halls' post-COVID recovery.

The picketing comes at an uncertain time in Atlantic City: The casinos and their online partners are collectively making more money now than before the pandemic hit.

But the casinos say those statistics are misleading because they get to keep only about 30% of online and sports betting money, with the rest going to their third-party partners. They say that in-person revenue won from gamblers is the crucial metric, and not all the casinos have surpassed their pre-pandemic levels.

The old contract between the casinos and Local 54 of the Unite Here union expired early Wednesday. Union leaders and workers said they will demonstrate as often as necessary to show the casinos they’re serious about their demand that workers are able to make up ground as the casinos are trying to do so.

“We are united, we are ready to fight, and we have very specific asks in a new contract, number one of which is a raise that matters,” said union president Bob McDevitt. “Our hope is the individual casinos will recognize that these are really big numbers that they are racking up, and that the workers have not had a cost-of-living raise in a while.”

The union has been negotiating with Caesars Entertainment, which owns Caesars, Harrah's and the Tropicana, as well as MGM Resorts International, which owns the city's top-performing property, the Borgata. The Tropicana was selected for the picket in recognition of Caesars' outsize role as the largest casino employer in the city.

The company declined to comment Wednesday.

Workers surrounded the casino,...

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