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News
Release
Contact: Mike Kiernan
August 30 2002
202-974-8121
Mississippi,
Nevada Lead Nation In Hotel Job Growth
New
Study on Hotel Industry Finds Gap Widening Between High and Low
Wages
Washington,
DCHotel employment, which rose by
16 percent nationwide during the 1990s, more than tripled in Mississippi
since 1989, making the state the nations leader in the rate
of new hotel job growth, according to a study released on August
30 by the AFL-CIO Working for America Institute.
Nevada was the
only state to surpass Mississippi in the total number of new hotel
jobs created during the 1990s. In Nevada, 88,350 new hotel jobs
were created, representing an increase of nearly 69 percent between
1989 and 2000.
During the same
period hotel employment in Mississippi increased from 7,900 to more
than 35,500 jobsa 350 percent increase. Many of the new jobs
are the result of new casinos built along the Mississippi Gulf Coast
as well as in Tunica County in northwestern Mississippi, south of
Memphis.
The report found
Mississippi with more hotel employees than 33 other states including
Mississippis four bordering statesTennessee (34,800),
Louisiana (24,971), Alabama (14,769), and Arkansas (10,635).
Unlike Mississippi,
Nevada has experienced rapid growth in hotel jobs for more than
two decades and currently employs 216,500 hotel workersthe
most of any state. Both states have seen a decline in hotel jobs
since March of last year as a result of the recession and the September
11 attacks.
The hotel study,
called U.S. Hotels and Their Workers:Room for Improvement,
examines changes in the U.S. hotel industry with a special focus
on jobs, wages, union representation, geographic composition, business
organization and competition since 1979. The study is available
online at www.workingforamerica.org.
While
Nevada and Mississippi accounted for nearly 45 percent of the 260,000
new hotel jobs created during the 1990s, the report found
a huge difference in hotel wages in the two states.
Hotel workers
received an average wage of more than $28,000 a year in Nevada compared
to about $20,000 a year in Mississippia 40 percent difference.
The report
pointed to union representation in Nevada as one factor likely contributing
to the wage difference. Nevada accounts for nearly a third of all
union hotel workers nationwide while few, if any, hotel workers
belong to unions in Mississippi.
The report found
that union workers nationwide fare much better than non-union workers
in the hotel industry. In 2000, hotel workers represented by unions
earned a median hourly wage of $10, $1.50 more than non-union workers
median wage of $8.50 per hour. Union hotel workers also are more
likely to work a standard full-time workweek, the report found.
Unions represent
close to 12 percent of all U.S. hotel workers. Besides Nevada, states
with the highest percentages of union hotel workers are Hawaii,
New York, New Jersey, Illinois, California, Rhode Island, Alaska
and Washington.
The study
demonstrates the real difference unions can make in the lives of workers,
said John W. Wilhelm, president of the Hotel Employees and Restaurant
Employees International Union (HERE), which represents approximately
265,000 hospitality industry workers. Unions can help raise
hotel workers wages and reduce wage gaps between high- and low-wage
workers. Even more importantly, the study shows that the hotel workers
who benefit most by participating in a union are those who traditionally
make the lowest wages.
This report
offers an in-depth look at the quality of jobs being created in
the hotel industry and the disparities that exist between high and
low-wage jobs as well as between union and non-union jobs,
said Nancy Mills, executive director of the AFL-CIO Working for
America Institute. This kind of research is critically important
as we undertake the task of creating more good jobsjobs that
can sustain families and help build stronger communities.
In looking at
wages, the report found that the gap between high and low wages
in the hotel industry has widened over the past two decades. High-wage
hotel workers earned 325 percent of what low-wage hotel workers
earned in 2000 compared to 240 percent in 1979.
The report also
found an increasing number of hotel jobs going to immigrants and
Hispanics. In many hotel job categoriesincluding cooks, janitors,
laundry workers, maids and housemen, and waiters and waitressesthe
percentage of Hispanics holding these jobs grew substantially during
the 1990s. In the late 1980s, for example, one in ten hotel waiters
and waitresses was Hispanic, but by the late 1990s over one in four
was Hispanic, the report found.
The study is
available on the Internet at www.workingforamerica.org.
For a printed copy of the study contact Mike Kiernan at the AFL-CIO
Working for America Institute at 202-974-8121 or mailto:info@workingforamerica.org.
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