Airline
catering workers are fed up with what they say are intolerable
conditions and low wages, and they brought that message to doorstep
of the Airline Passenger Experience Association Expo, held in Long
Beach, Calif. during the last week of September. Roughly 150 UNITE
HERE members, most from the Los Angeles local with some backup from
Phoenix, staged a lively picket of the expo as attendees looked on.
Any
traveler who’s spent time at a gate waiting for a flight to board
has probably spotted airline-catering trucks zooming around the
tarmac, loading and unloading the heavy carts flight attendants push
up and down the aisles during beverage service. Workers say that,
while airline food has a reputation for being vile, the working
conditions behind that food are even worse.
Catering
companies like LSG Sky Chefs, a Lufthansa-owned firm, rely on a
heavily immigrant workforce at airports across the country, including
in Los Angeles, Phoenix, San Francisco, Chicago, Washington, D.C. and
Dallas. LSG Sky Chefs workers say they’re
underpaid and forced to endure untenable conditions, particularly in
the South and Southwest, where extreme heat on the tarmac makes
workers miserable.
These
service workers have only glancing interactions with
passengers—waiting in line at shared public restrooms, or stepping
aside for people boarding and off-boarding planes. They’re under
tremendous pressure to keep pace with busy schedules and the demand
for tight turnaround at the gate, facing challenging working
conditions that include long, unfriendly hours and extreme weather.
Airline
catering workers for LSG Sky Chefs and other companies—Gate
Gourmet, and Flying Food Group—are now seeking to address these
injustices. UNITE HERE members launched
a national campaign in April to highlight their working
conditions and visited a United
Airlines shareholder meeting in May.
Wednesday’s
demonstration called attention to Los Angeles International Airport
(LAX), where many workers labor off-site in kitchens for LSG Sky
Chefs. Margarita Hernandez, who has been working for the company for
20 years, is a dishwasher. “To clean the dishes,” she says, “we
end up putting our hands inside the machine and exposing ourselves to
really hot water and chemicals … it makes my fingers hurt to be
working in the hot water.” Hernandez, who earns $12 an hour, says
“it’s even more stressful because of these quotas they have of us
… I’ve gotten urinary tract infections, because I’m not able to
leave and go to the bathroom.”
Her
colleague Clara Meza, a 33-year veteran, makes $14 an hour working in
the assembly area, where she says she handles hot food in the mostly
Latina-staffed kitchen. “They try to treat us like we’re slaves,”
she says of the grueling pace in the kitchen. “But we’re not
slaves. I know that slavery ended. It’s over.” Burns, cuts and
other injuries litter OSHA logs provided by UNITE HERE.
Once
that food leaves the kitchen, it winds up in sealed catering trucks
taken through security and out to the tarmac by drivers. At LAX,
those drivers look a lot like Alcidez Loeza, a 52 year old who’s
been working for LSG Sky Chefs for four years. Loeza is one of the
workers passengers sometimes see operating specialized trucks as they
raise and lower carts to the galley on aircraft. “They will show a
movie,” he says of the training process, “but I personally never
received any special training. They usually just send someone to tell
us what to do. We don’t have any special equipment or protections.
The
most difficult part of Loeza’s job takes place on the tarmac,
inside the trailers installed as staging areas for drivers and other
staffers known as “helpers.” The unventilated trailers surrounded
by concrete get hot rapidly in the shimmering L.A. heat, but drivers
are expected to work full shifts there. “Some of my coworkers have
had heat-related symptoms,” he said, describing rashes and workers
who “feel bad.” They won’t find relief in their trucks, either,
because they’re not provided with air conditioning.
In
an OSHA complaint provided to In
These Times, Loeza
and his colleagues claimed they also had inadequate access to
bathrooms, with airport geography forcing them to walk across areas
of the tarmac used by taxiing planes, which led some to withhold
water. Loeza said that sometimes his coworkers resorted to urinating
in water bottles, explaining that “there’s not even a way to wash
our hands, because there’s no water.” According to their OSHA
complaint, a portable washing station isn’t serviced regularly,
forcing people to wash clumsily with bottled water.
He
says he makes $15.70 hourly, the same as a colleague who’s been
with the company for 45 years. LAX has an airport
living wagesimilar to that seen at Seattle-Tacoma, Chicago
O’Hare and San
Jose International. Even off-site workers, like Meza and
Hernandez, are supposed to be subject to the wage, but they contend
they’re not receiving the benefits and wages they were promised.
“I’m
not able to help my children or my granddaughters when I barely have
enough for myself,” says Hernandez. Like any city, Los Angeles is
an expensive place to live, but rents there are particularly high,
with the cost of living rising steadily each year. According to
the 2016
Casden Real Estate Economic Forecast, the average rent in L.A.
County was $1,307. “It’s expensive to live in LA,” says Meza.
“I have to pay bills, pay rent, pay car insurance, health insurance
copays.”
Catering
workers are asking for better wages for themselves and their
colleagues, and Loeza also wants greater access to bathrooms and
sanitation. “Sometimes I see my coworkers walking across the runway
to go to the bathroom,” explains Loeza. “I don’t think that’s
right.” Improved ventilation and access to shade are also important
for tarmac personnel working in high heat.
“LSG
Sky Chefs is committed to providing a safe working environment for
our employees,” the company said in a statement, adding that it
provided workers with “opportunities to cool off.” It declined to
address questions about wages and sanitation.
In
2016, the LSG Group, which includes Sky Chefs, made nearly 3.8
billion in consolidated revenues, serving 209 airports worldwide. The
bulk of its business focuses on airline catering, though it also
offers auxiliary services, with an aggressive expansion strategy
targeting new customers and markets.
Using
contractors like LSG Group allows airlines to delegate the
responsibility for working conditions, although workers who service
United and American
flights have attempted to force the airlines’ hands with
public demonstrations like the one on Wednesday. Those say LSG Group
has promised better wages and benefits but failed to deliver. Time
will tell whether their rallies spark a sea change in the way the
company treats workers.
>> The article above was written by S.E. Smith, and is reprinted from In These Times.
1 comment:
Shut the fuck up.
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