Tera Butler has worked at the Lumiere Place casino in downtown St. Louis since it first opened 13 years ago. She鈥檚 first in seniority among workers in the VIP room 鈥 and beloved by the casino鈥檚 regulars.
But even though the casino reopened June 1 after several months of COVID-19-related shutdown, the VIP room has remained closed. And, last week, the casino鈥檚 owners moved to lay off 97 workers, including Butler. They included a dozen or so workers who rank low in seniority but also many more longtime workers assigned to parts of the casino that have yet to reopen: the VIP room, the buffet, the wok and the valet.
Last Friday, the ownership group reversed course. Kim Bartholomew, the secretary/treasurer of Unite Here Local 74, said Caesars Entertainment returned to the negotiating table Friday after previously saying it would begin sending severance agreements.
From there, things moved swiftly. Bartholomew said on St. Louis on the Air that both parties signed off on an agreement Monday morning. She said she could not discuss details but confirmed that it allows the 97 workers to stay on a recall list rather than be laid off.
The workers still haven鈥檛 been given a date to come back to Lumiere Place, she said. But if the VIP room and other shuttered parts of the hotel/casino complex reopen before April 2021, the workers keep their accrued pay rate and placement on the seniority list.
Caesars Entertainment鈥檚 apparent reversal followed publicity about the layoffs that included social media pleas from workers like Butler, and even .
Bartholomew said she believes such efforts paid off, citing 鈥渁 lot of the things we did to make this a little bit more public, to make them understand that it鈥檚 not just the workers there, but St. Louis as a whole, the community as a whole.鈥 She added, 鈥淲e have to start looking out for each other here.鈥
Bartholomew said the Lumiere Place employees have worked together so long, 鈥渢hey feel like a family.鈥
Caesars Entertainment did not respond to a message seeking comment.
On Friday, Bartholomew had said that she found the company鈥檚 decision to terminate the recall list inexplicable.
鈥淲hat I don鈥檛 understand is, you鈥檙e not spending any more money,鈥 Bartholomew said. 鈥淭he only thing I can deduce is that you don鈥檛 want these people there for some reason.鈥 She had speculated that Caesars wanted to replace the experienced workers with cheaper ones when places like the VIP room eventually reopen 鈥 or shed senior employees before the union contract comes up next year. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e getting rid of the diehard people.鈥
Overall, due to the ongoing pandemic, 70% of the workers represented by Unite Here Local 74 are still not back to work, Bartholomew said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 hit the hospitality industry, and anyone who represents the hospitality industry, pretty hard,鈥 she said.
鈥鈥 brings you the stories of St. Louis and the people who live, work and create in our region. The show is hosted by and produced by , , and . The audio engineer is .