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appalachiablue

(41,263 posts)
Mon Oct 16, 2023, 03:48 PM Oct 2023

A Hotel Worker's 3-Hr Commute Tells The Story of LA's Housing Crisis and Her Strike: NPR

- NPR, Oct. 15, 2023.

Brenda Mendoza was born and raised in Los Angeles' Koreatown, just a 10-minute drive from the upscale JW Marriott hotel where she's been working for 14 years.

But priced out of the downtown area she grew up in, Mendoza now lives almost 100 miles away in Apple Valley and commutes two to three hours each way to get to work. "Rents are going high," Mendoza said, talking to NPR just outside the JW Marriott during a short break. She decided to move last year when rent for their two-bedroom apartment rose to $3,000 a month, making it unaffordable for her.

Long commutes, for Mendoza and many of her colleagues, are a key reason why they've been on rolling strikes since early July. The union that represents the hotel workers, Unite Here Local 11, has come up with a unique proposal, directly tied to the housing crisis that workers face: a hospitality workforce housing fund. The idea is that hotels should charge a 7% fee on all guest rooms — and that money would help workers with their housing costs.

Los Angeles is notorious for its high cost of living. According to rental platform Zumper, the median rent for a two-bedroom apartment is more than $3,000, out of reach for many low-income workers. Mendoza moved from Koreatown to Downey, in southeast Los Angeles County, two years ago. Then, rising rent in Downey forced her to move again last year – this time to Apple Valley.

To make it to her 7 a.m. shift at work, Mendoze has to wake up at 3 a.m. Her husband and son also have to wake up early for their pre-dawn commutes to get to their jobs in the city because Mendoza drops them off before showing up to her own place of work. There, she makes $25 an hour as a uniform attendant, handling the outfits of the hotel staff, among other housekeeping tasks...https://www.npr.org/2023/10/15/1205976886/a-hotel-workers-3-hour-commute-tells-the-story-of-las-housing-crisis-and-her-str

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A Hotel Worker's 3-Hr Commute Tells The Story of LA's Housing Crisis and Her Strike: NPR (Original Post) appalachiablue Oct 2023 OP
It'd be cheaper for the hotel to build an apartment building for the workers. jimfields33 Oct 2023 #1
The problem with these business administration types is that they truly believe that any dollar Aristus Oct 2023 #2
So sad. But they don't understand happy employees makes for happy customers jimfields33 Oct 2023 #3
San Diego's school district passed a bond measure to begin BigmanPigman Oct 2023 #4
Smart move SD, good news for teachers. Let's see more of this. TY. appalachiablue Oct 2023 #5

jimfields33

(16,279 posts)
1. It'd be cheaper for the hotel to build an apartment building for the workers.
Mon Oct 16, 2023, 04:43 PM
Oct 2023

They can charge a fair rent or add it to a benefit. I bet they’d end up with big time long term employees. And I bet they’d do all they could to keep the job. Seems a win-win.

Aristus

(66,587 posts)
2. The problem with these business administration types is that they truly believe that any dollar
Mon Oct 16, 2023, 06:15 PM
Oct 2023

that doesn't go into their or their shareholders' pockets is a dollar stolen.

No amount of spreadsheets or cost-benefit analyses will change their mind on the subject.

Doing right by their employees is terra incognita to these types.

BigmanPigman

(51,722 posts)
4. San Diego's school district passed a bond measure to begin
Tue Oct 17, 2023, 02:25 AM
Oct 2023

housing for their teachers. A bond measure was passed a year ago and will begin in 2024

https://districtadministration.com/why-fewer-teachers-can-afford-to-live-in-the-areas-where-they-teach/

https://fox5sandiego.com/news/local-news/housing-costs-are-nearly-half-of-new-san-diego-teachers-salaries-report/

"Newer San Diego teachers are dishing out nearly half of their annual earnings to pay for housing, a new study finds.
A report from the National Council on Teacher Quality found that renting a typical one bedroom home in the San Diego Unified School District costs 41% of a beginning teacher’s salary.
That conclusion is based on the average income for emerging educators in San Diego, which the think tank reports to be $50,744 per year."

"Fast-forward to 2022, another state law — Assembly Bill 2295 — was approved by California Governor Gavin Newsom, which loosened some zoning requirements for building come 2024. This was done in an effort to make it easier for school districts to build.
What does this mean for San Diego educators? With the use of $226 million bond — Measure U — San Diego Unified is planning construction for this kind of affordable housing.
This means there may be some relief on the chalk board for new teachers looking to work in this district."

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