Olympic breakfast off the menu? Staff at IOC’s luxury Paris hotel go on strike

The IOC was embarrassed on Thursday morning when workers from the luxury hotel occupied by its delegation at Paris 2024 went on strike, claiming they have not received a pay rise for seven years.

A group of chefs, waiters and technical staff at the five-star Hotel du Collectionneur began a two-hour protest at 7am, causing some disruption to the breakfast service. It is understood to have bred consternation at the top of the International Olympic Committee, who will host regular dinners and events at the venue.

One such function is due to take place this evening and there is an awareness that further strike action over the next two and a half weeks could present an even more awkward scenario. The Olympic organisers are believed to have paid approximately £18.5m for sole use of the premises during the Games.

Union Departmentale CGT Paris (UD CGT), a trade union representing the workers, posted a video from inside the hotel showing around a dozen staff lining one of the corridors used by guests. Some waved the union’s flags and others held notices with slogans such as “Luxury hotel, poverty wages” and “Give us back our social assets”.

According to UD CGT, workers at Hotel du Collectionneur have not been given a pay rise for seven years. It claims that, despite a dividend of over £8m being handed to shareholders this year, no breakthrough has been made in improving the financial position of its staff.

The Guardian understands that the offer of a 2% salary increase, made on Wednesday during the latest of five meetings in a negotiation with UD CGT that began in June, was rejected and led to the strike. Hotel du Collectionneur is thought to be an outlier among Paris’s luxury hotels in not having reached agreements with its workers before the Olympics.

Central to the workers’ demands is a “13th month”, which is a common salary addition in France. It is essentially a bonus, or variable pay structure, in which an extra month’s payment is received annually in December. While not mandatory, it is viewed as standard in the high-end hotel sector. The stance among Hotel Du Collectionneur’s strikers is that the total of their demands represents only one twentieth of its contract with the IOC.

On Thursday the Guardian was turned away from Hotel Du Collectionneur, access to which is tightly limited, but IOC guests and dignitaries could be seen moving around the venue freely. It was also used by Uefa, European football’s governing body, for a high-profile congress in February.

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The IOC and the Gate Collection, which runs Hotel du Collectionneur, have been contacted for comment.

Информация на этой странице взята из источника: https://www.theguardian.com/sport/article/2024/jul/25/olympic-breakfast-off-the-menu-staff-at-ioc-luxury-paris-hotel-go-on-strike