For years, UNITE-HERE Local 11 has been publicly inflating its membership numbers by 63% above what it is reporting to the U.S. Department of Labor in mandatory annual disclosures.
Throughout Local 11’s website and communications, the union claims to represent 32,000 workers – a claim that is then repeated in news stories.
However, that isn’t what Local 11 is telling the federal government.
Every year, labor union locals must file an annual report known as an LM-2 with the U.S. Department of Labor (with the exception of unions representing solely state, county, or municipal employees). These reports disclose locals’ membership rolls, payroll, revenues and expenditures, liabilities and assets, and other financial and operations information.
Local 11’s most recent LM-2 was filed in March of this year, covering the calendar year 2022. According to that report, Local 11’s membership is actually only 20,394.
And that number includes 4,593 “pending status members.”
UNITE-HERE Local 11 has 1,735 “agency fee payers” – employees who work in a closed “union shop” hotel organized by a bargaining unit, but who are not actually members of the union.
Based on a review of UNITE-HERE Local 11’s past LM-2s, their claim to represent 32,000 members stems from their immediately pre-pandemic membership levels. At the end of 2019, Local 11 reported to the US Labor Department that it had 28,649 active and pending members.
Only by lumping in 3,200 agency fee payers did Local 11 achieve “approximately 32,000” which is still deceptive, as agency fee payers are not union members.
Local 11’s membership numbers obviously took a beating during the COVID-19 pandemic closures ordered by Government Newsom. During 2020, it’s membership hovered around 8,000 workers.
However, Local 11’s membership has recovered much more slowly compared to the other California-based UNITE-HERE chapters, Locals 2 and 30 – which are already back at pre-pandemic levels.
UNITE-HERE is sponsoring an LA-style ballot initiative to impose a huge wage increase and complicated and costly work rules on all Anaheim hotels, and event centers – with the caveat that Local 11 may agree to waive those costly mandates if the hotel or event center unionizes. If the measure passes, critics contend UNITE-HERE will use it to boost its sagging membership numbers by leverage hotels and event centers to unionize.
Local 11 did not respond to a request for comment on why it is publicly claiming inflated membership numbers.