Sunday, May 05, 2019

Employee advocates call for greater protections for overnight workers after Saanich hotel robbery
WATCH: Employee advocates are calling for greater protections for overnight workers after the robbery of a Saanich hotel Thursday morning.  Dramatic surveillance video shows thieves overpowering a lone hotel clerk. Mary Griffin reports.


Unifor union representative Jeannie Blaney watched the shocking surveillance video of the May 2nd, Howard Johnson Hotel, and Suites robbery and is voicing her concern for the hotel clerk, who was dragged by the suspects to a back room and tied up.

“I’ve dealt with workers who’ve experienced that, and it’s horrific,” Blaney said.
The violent robbery happened Thursday at 4 a.m., at the Howard Johnson Hotel on Elk Lake Drive. The two masked suspects overpowered the lone desk clerk then stole a “substantial” amount of cash.
Now Unifor is pushing for strengthening protections for graveyard shift workers.
“I would like to see two co-workers at the desk,” Blaney said.
That used to be the law in B.C.  Working at a gas station in Maple Ridge, employee Grant DePatie died in 2005 after being dragged by a driver who refused to pay. But the Liberals changed Grant’s Law in 2012. The Retail Action Network’s Eric Nordal wants the two-person rule back.
“Working in late night industries like this where you are handling a lot of cash, workers are constantly at risk,” Nordal said.
Spencer Lackmanec knows first hand the dangers of working at night.
“We’re calling on the government, the NDP, to re-implement those parts of Grant’s Law that were taken away,” Lackmanec said.
In the fall, five U.S. hotel chains, including the corporate owners of the Howard Johnson hotels, Wyndham Hotels, agreed to supply workers with panic buttons.
“If you are panicking, and you know you’ve got something around your neck. And you could press it, and police would be notified right away,” Blaney said.
Saanich police confirm the victim in Thursday’s robbery did not have a panic button.
THEY ARE CALLED WORKING ALONE REGULATIONS WE HAVE THEM IN ALBERTA, AND HAVE INCLUDED HAVING PANIC BUTTONS OR SOME FORM OF COMMUNICATION ALSO NOW PREPAYING FOR GAS IN ORDER TO PROTECT GAS STATION WORKERS ON NIGHT SHIFT


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