AFFECTING LIVES


The members of our union were born in the United States and in countries around the globe. Some are from families who have lived in this country for generations. Others arrived among the successive waves of immigrants who made the brave decision to leave their home country in search of a brighter future here. Still others are among the more recent arrivals who came in pursuit of that same hope.

Our members speak more than 50 different languages, embrace many different religions, and are of many different ethnic backgrounds and cultures. Together, they are emblematic of the successive generations who established and built our country, and our union.

Look at our members' faces, learn about their lives and those of their children, and you will see in their faces and find in their life histories an important piece of the history of this country. Chances are you will also find they stir in you recollections of at least some members of your own family.

Our members found in and through their union the dignity and respect which otherwise would likely have been denied them, both inside and outside the workplace. Managers of our union hotels understand that the union will not tolerate violations of that dignity and respect. If a manager's behavior crosses the line-be it by a derogatory ethnic remark, a racial or religious slur or other insensitive and unacceptable comment, sexual harassment, or discriminatory conduct-the union acts swiftly to address a manager's offending behavior as soon as it becomes known.

The rights, protections, and benefits our union daily provides and enforces enable members to feel confident and secure in their workplaces. And the security the union provides members in the workplace carries over into their home lives as well. Husbands, wives, and children are able to know the daily rewards of a stable environment, an environment that makes possible the living of happy and productive lives. It is no surprise that over the years, so many children of union members have chosen to follow a parent into our union. They do so recognizing it will enable them to provide for their children the benefits their union childhood afforded them.

Whatever the differences in their backgrounds, ever since the beginning of our union our members have held dear the same things, shared the same fundamental values, pursued the same goals, and worked hard to accomplish them. They have been, and always will be, people who work hard to provide for their families, buy a home, save for retirement, and contribute to their communities.

They strive to provide their children educations superior to their own and enable them to accomplish goals, which in the past would have had to remain unrealized dreams. With each passing decade, more members proudly watch daughters and sons graduate not only from high school but also from college. Some go on to graduate school. We now number among our union family children who, many with the benefit of union-provided scholarships, have become teachers, lawyers, nurses and doctors, and successful business people.

Many of our members have remarkable personal histories. Other of our members (and their children) engage in activities that bring not only fulfillment to them but also contribute to enriching the lives of others in many different ways. Here are just a few examples:

  • A room service captain at one of the legendary Manhattan hotels is noted for his beautiful singing voice and performs with the New York City Opera.
  • The adult son of a member remembers how the union changed his family's life by fighting against the hotel's discriminatory treatment of his father. The son subsequently became a lawyer. He is now the executive director of a nationally renowned organization dedicated to protecting the freedoms the Constitution and laws of the United States guarantee to all in this country.
  • A banquet waiter in his 80s is known for his many years of dedicated work on behalf of various humanitarian causes, both here in the United States and abroad.
  • A room service order taker brings delight to his neighbors with the beautiful roses he grows in his yard. He also finds time to be active in Bangladeshi community groups.
  • The son of another member was a winner of a union scholarship, graduated from college, and then went to medical school. He is now a cardiologist, and he and a long-time member had a warm moment of connection when they happened to encounter one another as doctor and patient.
  • Yet another member, a banquet waiter, met a presidential candidate during the primary campaign when the candidate came to the hotel at which the member worked. They talked, and so touched was the candidate by what our member said to him, that he several times spoke about this member in speeches made during the campaign. Later, the member and his family had the extraordinary thrill of attending the inauguration at the personal invitation of that candidate, the newly elected president, William Jefferson Clinton.

The list goes on and on.

Sadly, the fine men and women who are our members are invisible to many people. These people don't give a thought to the room attendant who cleans up after them, the server who brings a delicious meal to their table or room, or the cook who prepares it. They do not see the front desk agent who welcomes them to the hotel and checks them in, the doorman who gets them their taxi in the rain or snow, or the house attendant who keeps the lobby and restrooms spotless. Worst of all, they fail to recognize in our members-in their devotion to their families and to their jobs and their selflessness and commitment to hard work-the same qualities so many of these unseeing people admire and respect in their own parents, grandparents, or great grandparents.

So, in this section, you will come to meet our union's members and their children. Once you do, we think it unlikely you will ever again take them for granted. They are the backbone of their families, their communities, and this country, and they are the strength of our union.

We begin to salute them here.

We have recently begun to add content to this section, we will continue to add more. Please visit this section again soon.


Awards announced in union's writing contest
Hotel Voice, November 30, 2009 - The Union's annual writing contest for high school students has grown greatly in popularity since it was initiated six years ago. [more...]
Related issues: Affecting Lives, Benefit


Here are the 2009 Writing Contest winners
Hotel Voice, November 30, 2009 - Selecting the winners of our Union's annual writing contest is a difficult task, especially because there is no exact measuring device for creativity. This year's winners wrote about a wide range of topics. As in past contests, however, the diverse entries often had the collective element of social awareness. [more...]
Related issues: Benefit, Affecting Lives


2009 Writing Contest Winners
Hotel Voice, November 30, 2009 - POETRY:First Place Tykisha Brown [more...]
Related issues: Affecting Lives, Benefit


Union members' children teach valuable lessons in their essays & prose
Hotel Voice, November 23, 2009 - One of the best ways to learn about the value of union membership is by listening to the children of union members. Once again in this year's writing contest, the results of which will be published in next week's Hotel Voice, a number of children of our members submitted essays explaining why they found their parents' union membership to be so valuable. [more...]
Related issues: Affecting Lives, Benefit

Writing Contest Awards
Hotel Voice, November 23, 2009 - The union's writing contest prizes for 2009 have been awarded, with more than $10,000 distributed to 14 high school students. Here, speaking to some of the award recipients and family members, is Donald Rubin of the Shelley and Donald Rubin Foundation, the sponsor of the competition. [more...]
Related issues: Benefit, Affecting Lives


Union Writing Contest: Check out this year's Poetry winners!
NYHTC, November 22, 2009 - Every year, the New York Hotel Trades Council holds a writing contest for high school students who have a parent who belongs to the union. [more...]
Related issues: Affecting Lives, Benefit


Union fights racism at Sheraton New York
NYHTC, November 22, 2009 - One night, my manager passed me in the hall and said he needed to speak with me. I asked if we could talk in private. He said, 'There is no private here. I own you like my grandfather owned your grandfather.' [more...]
Related issues: Affecting Lives, Sheraton New York, Ritz-Carlton New York, Organizing

More entertainment from the union's Aching Dogs Theatre
Hotel Voice, November 16, 2009 - "There are 8 million stories in the naked city. We're going to tell… um… seven of them," reads the program for New York Nuts 3, the 20th production presented by Aching Dogs Theatre. [more...]
Related issues: Aching Dogs, benefit, Affecting Lives

How are you going to pay for your kids' college tuition? The union can help!
Hotel Voice, November 16, 2009 - As we noted two weeks ago when we told you about beneficial changes in 529 plans to help you save money for your children's college education, the two biggest areas of the economy that have outpaced the rate of inflation in recent years are the cost of medical care and college tuition. [more...]
Related issues: benefit, Affecting LIves

Union members' children win scholarships
Hotel Voice, July 7, 2009 - The faces of the future smiled brightly at the Palace Hotel on June 26th. [more...]
Related issues: Scholarship, Benefit, Affecting Lives

2008 Vito J Pitta Scholarship Award Ceremony
HTC-TV, June 23, 2008 - For the 22nd year in a row, the Union and Hotel Association presented deserving students with college scholarships. [more...]
Related issues: Scholarships, HTC-TV, Video, Affecting Lives

Combating Racism
HTC-TV, January 30, 2008 - [more...]
Related issues: Contract Enforcement, Millennium Broadway, HTC-TV, Video, Affecting Lives