Las Vegas Sun

March 29, 2024

Strike at Taj Mahal casino raises questions about its future

Atlantic City

Wayne Parry / AP

A casino worker carries a picket sign on Thursday June 30, 2016, in Atlantic City, N.J., as contract talks between his union, Local 54 of Unite-HERE, and the Trump Taj Mahal were underway to try to prevent a threatened Friday strike. Still seething from the cancellation of its members’ health insurance and pension benefits nearly two years ago, Atlantic City’s main casino workers union said early Friday it will go on strike against the Trump Taj Mahal casino.

Updated Friday, July 1, 2016 | 1:39 p.m.

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — A strike against Atlantic City's most vulnerable casino on the biggest moneymaking weekend of the year raised fresh questions about the future of the Trump Taj Mahal.

Local 54 of the Unite-HERE union went on strike Friday against the casino, which was opened in 1990 by presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump but now belongs to a different billionaire, Carl Icahn.

The Taj Mahal, which remains open and was to host a concert by the hair metal band Whitesnake on Friday night, ranks next to last in Atlantic City in terms of the amount of money it wins from gamblers each month. It narrowly escaped closing during its most recent turn through bankruptcy court.

The union called the strike after being unable to agree on a contract that restored health care and pension benefits that a bankruptcy judge terminated in October 2014. It reached new contracts Thursday with four of the five casinos it had targeted: Bally's, Caesars, Harrah's and the Tropicana.

"All we want is a fair contract," said Pete Battaglini, a bellman at the Taj Mahal. "We just want what everybody else in the city has. We're not asking for the moon, just the same."

Battaglini said paying for health insurance on his own through the Affordable Care Act has left him in dire financial straits.

"I have two daughters in college that I'm paying for, and having to pay for my own health insurance, it's draining," he said. "You have to make choices: Do I pay the bills this month, the health insurance premium or the tuition? It has totally changed my life."

He was one of about 1,000 members who began walking off the job at 6 a.m., joining fellow union members in protest on the Boardwalk. The striking workers include those who serve drinks, cook food, carry luggage and clean hotel rooms. Dealers and security personnel are not included in the walkout.

Contract talks broke off early Friday, and union president Bob McDevitt said no further talks are scheduled.

"Workers in Atlantic City understand that there was a social compact in 1976 when gaming was first approved for Atlantic City: We will give you a license to make money, but the jobs have to be good, middle-class jobs," he said. "At the Taj Mahal, they're poverty level."

He noted that the Tropicana — which Icahn also owns — settled its contract on Thursday.

"It's telling that workers at the Trop are elated, and their co-workers at the Taj Mahal are on strike today," he said. "I don't understand why they do this."

Icahn did not respond to repeated requests for comment Friday.

The casino pressed management into service, performing work that striking union members had done, including handling luggage at the hotel desk.

And a bar trailer outside from the casino succeeded in drowning out some of the union's chanting and singing by blasting hip-hop from large speakers mounted atop its roof.

Chuck Baker, a cook at the casino since the day it opened in 1990 and a member of the negotiating committee, said Taj Mahal management offered to restore some level of health care late Thursday, but the union rejected it as inadequate.

"We feel as if we have been mistreated and taken for granted long enough," he said. "The time is now to take it to the streets."

Picketers booed loudly when a young man entered the casino shortly after the strike began, but they made no attempt to block access. As the morning wore on, security officials held open doors to the casino farther down the Boardwalk, allowing patrons to enter without having to cross union picket lines outside the main entrance.

The bankruptcy filing and the benefit terminations at the Taj Mahal happened five years after Trump relinquished control of the casino and its parent company, Trump Entertainment Resorts.

Aside from a 10 percent stake in the company for the use of his name that was wiped out in bankruptcy, Trump has had no involvement with the company since 2009.

The last time Local 54 waged a strike, in 2004, the walkout lasted 34 days.

Join the Discussion:

Check this out for a full explanation of our conversion to the LiveFyre commenting system and instructions on how to sign up for an account.

Full comments policy