Monday, June 7, 2010

Happiest Place On Earth Gets Sued: Now, That's Not Happy

Mickey

Woman allegedly fired for cursing, all other workers angry about additional work caused by a larger resort.
MaryAnn Hegner, bartender in Disneyland’s Lost Bar and union steward for her union, Unite Here, at the Disneyland Hotel for 23 years was fired recently. She filed a retaliation charge with the National Labor Relations Board Tuesday because she feels she was fired suddenly and without just cause. She claims she was fired Saturday when a co-worker who she does not get along with, made an allegation that Hegner used a profanity while working, an allegation Hegner denies.

Meanwhile, there will be a hearing Aug. 2 in Los Angeles on Unite Here’s complaint that workers have to do more at Disneyland Resort because of build-ons and build-ups. The workers say there’s more to do because Disney has added new mattresses, more pillows and larger sheets and that the extra chores have led to some injuries, Unite Here spokeswoman Leigh Shelton said. Disney officials say other chores have been cut out, making the work level the same.
Hegner said she believes the firing is in retaliation for her recent union involvement. “I definitely believe this has to do with my union activity,” she said. “When our rights are being violated, I speak up for myself and my coworkers.”. Union officials say Hegner’s sudden termination for the alleged use of profanity is unprecedented and violates Disney’s past practices. There was no progressive disipline, a write-up or a suspension on the first offense.
Brown said “Unite Here has a history of filing a disproportionately high number of grievances. This is just another one of their tactics to distract from the real issue that after more than two years their members still do not have a contract despite our fair and comprehensive offer.”

At the hearing, labor relations board staff will represent the union before an administrative law judge who will make a recommendation to the labor board, said Bruce Hill, assistant to the regional director for the NLRB in Los Angeles’ Region 21.
LostBarDiningLowBand

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Can't Stop The Pot: Patients Fight To Stop Los Angeles From Pot-Blocking

Superior Court Judge James Chalfant denied an attempt to stop a city ordinance from shutting down 400+ medical marijuana dispensaries. He just wants Los Angeles to prove their case to do so.

City Council created an ordinance to close the doors of all the pot shops that have popped up across Los Angeles over the past several years. The law would close down over 400 dispensaries and cause roughly 130 others to have six months to meet stringent guidelines if they wished to remain open. This new Law would have gone effective as of Monday.

Not so fast Los Angeles, Attorneys for patients using medical marijuana had filed a class-action lawsuit last week, contending that the law would unconstitutionally bar patients’ access to their medicine. (Word.) Although the law only calls for dispenseries to be removed from areas that are 1000 miles radius from schools and churches, allegedly it is a violation of the rights of citizens that need access.

“I believe access to medical marijuana … is supposed to be limited,” the judge said. “It is not supposed to be freely available on the street to anyone who wants it; that was the intention of the people.”

The class action suit included over 100,000 Los Angeles residents who suffer from illnesses ranging from anxiety and menopause to lupus or AIDS, according to an article written in Los Angeles Times.

Superior Court Judge James Chalfant on Friday ordered attorneys to file additional papers on whether allowing certain dispensaries to remain open while closing others would be a violation of the equal protection clause of the California Constitution.

Hearings for the patients and the dispensaries were set for early July.