Election Violations Prompt New Vote For Hawaii Hotel Union Leadership
Some members say the Unite Here Local 5 election do-over is still unfair to opposition candidates and members who were out of work during the pandemic.
When Eric Gill was elected to the top job at Hawaii鈥檚 biggest hospitality and health care union in May 2019, it might have seemed like little more than a formality 鈥 a long-time union leader continuing to hold the job he鈥檚 had for years.
But officials of the U.S. Department of Labor have a different view. A labor department investigation, finalized in March 2020, found multiple violations of the federal law governing local union elections: violations serious enough to require a new election 鈥 this time monitored by the department.
Now, as hotel and hospital workers submit their ballots to decide who will run the 11,000-member chapter, opposition candidates are crying foul. They say union officials are blocking members from voting or running for union leadership positions by relying on membership rules the union should waive during the pandemic.
Members can mail in ballots and will be able to vote in person on Aug. 26.
Union officials declined interview requests. But a Department of Labor official confirmed that members who didn鈥檛 pay dues during the pandemic will have to pay at least one month鈥檚 dues plus a reinstatement fee to be able to vote in the election.
Meanwhile, would-be candidates who didn鈥檛 stay up to date on dues can鈥檛 run at all, said Michael Petersen, the labor department鈥檚 regional public affairs director in San Francisco.
Such 鈥済ood-standing鈥 rules are common, Petersen said.
But some members argue the COVID-19 pandemic changed Hawaii鈥檚 hospitality industry so much that members shouldn鈥檛 be kept from voting or running for positions for not paying dues.
Hernando Ramos Tan, an engineer at The Royal Hawaiian hotel who is running to unseat Gill as the union鈥檚 financial secretary-treasurer, the top job, said it鈥檚 absurd not to give financially strapped hospitality workers a break from paying dues. He accused Gill and other incumbent union leaders of using bylaws to suppress voters and to eliminate Ramos Tan from fielding a full slate of opposition candidates.
Ramos Tan noted that landlords have let tenants defer rent payments and banks have given borrowers extensions on mortgage payments because of COVID-19.
鈥淓verybody is trying to be nice during the pandemic, but your union won鈥檛 give you a break: you鈥檙e supposed to be up-to-date,鈥 he said.
鈥淭his is his way to prevent me from getting a slate鈥 of opposition candidates, Ramos Tan said of Gill.
Gill declined to comment, saying it would be improper to discuss the situation as ballots are being handed out and members are sending them in. However, Gill did point out that the current election is being monitored by the U.S. Department of Labor to ensure Ramos Tan and others are treated fairly.
鈥淣o rules were bent against him,鈥 Gill said. 鈥淭he rules for running for office haven鈥檛 changed and shouldn鈥檛 change.鈥
Who Can Run For Leadership Posts
Bryant de Venecia, a spokesman for Local 5, declined requests for an interview, but instead issued a statement saying that who can vote and run in elections is governed by the Unite Here International Union constitution, local bylaws and Department of Labor regulations.
鈥淭hese rules have not changed since the last internal union election,鈥 the statement said. 鈥淗owever, due to the unprecedented nature of the pandemic and the large number of workers that have been laid off from Local 5 jobs, the Department of Labor and the Union have agreed to expand the number of Local 5 workers that will receive mail-in ballots to ensure that they have sufficient time and opportunity to meet eligibility requirements to vote in the internal election.鈥
Contrary to the union鈥檚 statement, the Unite Here International Union constitution lets the local unions decide in its bylaws who can vote and run.
Petersen, the labor department spokesman, confirmed the union has modified the rules somewhat to let more people vote. Under an agreement between the union and the department, members don’t have to be completely caught up with back dues, as the bylaws require. Instead, they will be able to vote if they鈥檝e paid their dues for June, plus a $125 鈥渞einstatement鈥 or 鈥済ood standing鈥 fee, Petersen said.
Some workers say that鈥檚 not good enough. Manuel Malihan, who works as a housekeeper at the Sheraton Waikiki, said he was especially strapped for cash because a work injury put him out of commission for almost a year before the pandemic, and he had recently returned to work when COVID-19 struck.
Because he had been off the job, Malihan qualified for only $121 per week in unemployment pay and none of the generous federal unemployment benefits paid to workers at the time.
Opeta Ofagalilo, an electrician at the Sheraton who wanted to run as a trustee, said it is especially unfair to penalize candidates who were out of work for not paying dues when some union staff and leadership were still employed and making money.
鈥淭hey should understand, this was during the pandemic,鈥 Ofagalilo said. 鈥淲e were out of work for more than a year.鈥
More than a dozen opposition candidates can鈥檛 run because they missed payments, he said.
鈥淗alf of the slate is not qualified to run because of the union dues,鈥 he said.
At stake in the election are lucrative jobs in a labor organization that wields considerable political power.
The union reported $8.7 million in revenue for 2018, according to its most recent tax return. Gill earned just less than $114,000 in total compensation.
Also up for grabs are more than a dozen other positions, including the No. 2 post of union president, currently held by Gemma Weinstein, which paid about $93,000 in total compensation.
, the union agreed to hold the new election after a department investigation found the union violated ballot secrecy requirements by printing serial numbers on ballots that could be used to identify how members had voted.
In addition, it found that union and employer funds were improperly used when union staff and members campaigned on employer property during work hours and that the union destroyed certain ballots and records it was supposed to safeguard for a year, another statutory violation.
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About the Author
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Stewart Yerton is the senior business writer for 天美视频. You can reach him at syerton@civilbeat.org.