Industry-Favored Hotel Mr. C Vetoes Panic Buttons for Employees

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Union workers at the L.A. hotel (where Harvey Weinstein allegedly raped an actress) demand heightened security, citing examples of guests exposing themselves to employees.

In the decade since the sexual assault case of former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn involving a maid at the Sofitel in Manhattan , panic button systems increasingly have been mandated to protect hotel employees against sexual misconduct, whether through collective bargaining — as negotiated by the New York Hotel Trades Council — or through ordinances in cities including Seattle, Miami, Long Beach and Santa Monica.

The push is already getting pushback, though, from one L.A.-area hotel. According to Kurt Petersen, co-president of hotel workers union Unite Here 11, management at Mr. C Beverly Hills made clear during recent contract negotiations that it won’t pay for a system, citing cost. “It speaks volumes about their values, for them to say it’s not worth the money,” says Petersen, who notes that Mr. C does not staff a 24-hour security office.

Sir Richard Branson and members of the Missoni fashion dynasty have checked in to the 12-floor, 138-room Mr. C, whose interiors, defined by highly polished rosewood walls and Murano glass chandeliers, recall a luxury yacht. Its eponymous lobby-level restaurant features the same carpaccio recipe which the brothers’ great-grandfather Guiseppe invented in 1950 at his famed Harry’s Bar in Venice.

 

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