Hotels, sports arenas and selected other businesses that imposed layoffs in recent weeks could be required to offer those jobs to their former employees once they start rehiring, under a proposal backed Wednesday by the Los Angeles City Council.

Council members voted 15-0 to draft an ordinance requiring employers in the hospitality, property management and other targeted industries to reach out to their pool of workers who lost jobs during the coronavirus outbreak, with rehiring based on seniority.

The measure is meant to ensure that workers — especially those who are older and more experienced — are not replaced by newer, cheaper labor once the economy rebounds, said Councilman Bob Blumenfield, who represents the west San Fernando Valley.

“This is really important to protect vulnerable workers who’ve had these jobs for a long time, have given to the company,” he said. “It makes sense for us to provide them basic protections so that they know that when this pandemic is over, their company will take them back.”


1 / 35 Eugene’s Gulf Coast Cuisine in Houston begins serving customers again on May 1. Houston restaurants were allowed to reopen at 25% capacity. (Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle) 2 / 35 Protesters trying to enter the Michigan House of Representative chamber face off with Michigan State Police officers at the Capitol in Lansing. (Jeff Kowalsky / AFP/Getty Images ) 3 / 35 Armed protesters on the steps of the Michigan State Capitol in Lansing. (Jeff Kowalsky / AFP/Getty Images ) 4 / 35 Demonstrators at the Michigan Capitol in Lansing. (Jeff Kowalsky / AFP/Getty Images) 5 / 35 Denise Gavitt, left, and Lauren Matheson attend to clients at Gavitt’s Beehive Salon in Edmond, Okla., the first day hair salons have been allowed to reopen. (Sue Ogrocki / Associated Press) 6 / 35 Waitress Fatima Hernandez, center, talks with Lulu Salcido, right, and Hamid Farzam at El Tiempo Cantina Friday, May 1, 2020, in Houston. The restaurant reopened their dining room for table service, with limited capacity. (David J. Phillip / Associated Press) 7 / 35 Dan Krisman, left, and Mark Bartlett eat lunch on the patio of Roasters in Atlanta. Roasters is open for dine-in service with social distancing. (Getty Images) 8 / 35 Wickenburg, Ariz., police officers inform Debra Thompson, owner of the Horseshoe Cafe, that she is violating the state’s stay-at-home order by allowing guests to dine in on May 1. (Christian Petersen / Getty Images) 9 / 35 A restaurant in Franklin, Tenn., reopens on Monday. (Jason Kempin / Getty Images) 10 / 35 People demonstrate against stay-at-home orders in Denver on Sunday. (Jason Connolly / AFP-Getty Images) 11 / 35 Natascha Updegrove, a stylist at Three-13 Salon, Spa and Boutique, cuts Karon Gilmore’s hair on the first day that Georgia reopened salons, spas, gyms and bowling alleys.

(Jenny Jarvie / Los Angeles Times) 12 / 35 An employee wearing gloves and a mask greets patrons at a restaurant in Franklin, Tenn., on Monday. (Jason Kempin / Getty Images) 13 / 35 Zenas Stalworth works out at a gym in Lilburn, Ga., on Friday. He was one of just two people in the gym. (Tami Chappell / AFP-Getty Images ) 14 / 35 Bartender Jake Glazier serves customers at a roadside bar in Atlanta. (Chandan Khanna / AFP-Getty Images) 15 / 35 Carter Vu is back in business at his Atlanta salon. (Michael Mathes / AFP-Getty Images ) 16 / 35 Protesters in Madison, Wis. (Kamil Krzaczynski / AFP-Getty Images) 17 / 35 Surin Nguyen works on the nails of a customer at a reopened salon in Atlanta. (Tami Chappell / AFP-Getty Images) 18 / 35 A salon in Marietta, Ga. (Ron Harris / Associated Press) 19 / 35 Reopening day at a Marietta, Ga., salon. (Ron Harris / Associated Press) 20 / 35 Tuna Harbor Dockside Market in San Diego on April 11. (Ariana Drehsler / AFP-Getty Images ) 21 / 35 General Electric workers applaud Vice President Mike Pence during a visit in Madison, Wis., on April 21. (Kamil Krzaczynski / AFP-Getty Images ) 22 / 35 In Wisconsin, protesters opposed to the coronavirus shutdown demonstrate outside the Capitol in Madison. (Kamil Krzaczynski / AFP-Getty Images ) 23 / 35 Demonstrators who want to end the lockdown in Virginia protest near the Capitol in Richmond on April 22. (Win McNamee / Getty Images) 24 / 35 Jacksonville Beach, Fla. (Sam Greenwood / Getty Images) 25 / 35 Construction workers in New York City. (Rob Kim / Getty Images) 26 / 35 A Starbucks in Dallas. (Ronald Martinez / Getty Images) 27 / 35 Demonstrators in Richmond, Va. (Tom Williams / Getty Images) 28 / 35 A flight from Atlanta to Baltimore. (Rob Carr / Getty Images) 29 / 35 Jacksonville Beach, Fla. (Sam Greenwood / Getty Images) 30 / 35 Demonstrators in Richmond, Va. (Tom Williams / Getty Images) 31 / 35 Chris McCormick assembles face shields for friends who work at the U.S. Post Office near his shop in Elkridge, Md. (Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images) 32 / 35 Inmates sew protective masks at Las Colinas Women’s Detention Facility in Santee in San Diego County. (Sandy Huffaker / AFP-Getty Images ) 33 / 35 Easter service at Memorial Missionary Baptist Church in Kansas City, Mo. (Jamie Squire / Getty Images) 34 / 35 Downtown Nashville. (Jason Kempin / Getty Images) 35 / 35 Jacksonville Beach, Fla. (Sam Greenwood / Getty Images)

Backed by unions that represent custodians, hotel employees and airport workers, the “right of recall” proposal would apply to event venues with more than 1,000 seats, such as stadiums and concert halls; hotels with at least 50 rooms; some companies that operate at airports; and commercial properties such as offices, shopping centers or factories that employ at least 25 janitorial, maintenance and security workers.

The council acted after hearing pleas from laid-off hotel workers, who said the proposal would provide them more certainty about their futures.

“I don’t have any insurance. I have a 7-month-old baby ... and I’m worried if she gets sick, how I’m gonna do it if I don’t have no money,” said Walter Almendarez, a laid-off bellman at the Chateau Marmont.


André Balazs, the owner of the Chateau Marmont, could not be reached to discuss the measure. But on a GoFundMe page for his hotel’s laid off workers, he said this year’s “drastic and unspeakably painful layoffs” could not be avoided.

“The Chateau is committing to recall workers as needed and, when possible, by seniority when business returns to normal,” Balazs wrote.

Many other businesses would not be covered by the council’s proposal, including restaurants that are not located on hotel properties.

The rehiring rules also would not apply to nonprofit higher education institutions that operate medical centers in the city.


Councilman Curren Price, whose district includes the University of Southern California, proposed that exemption; his spokeswoman Angelina Valencia said it would apply to such entities as USC and UCLA.

Unionized businesses are also exempt from the rules if workers already have retention rights under their contracts.

Once the city’s lawyers have drafted the ordinance, it will come back to the council for final approval. Mayor Eric Garcetti has already publicly stated that he plans to sign such an ordinance, saying skilled workers “need to be the first ones to be rehired.”

The council’s plan drew opposition from several business groups, including the California Employment Law Council, whose board members include representatives of FedEx and Sempra Energy.


In a letter to the council ahead of Wednesday’s vote, the group said the measure would “weaken” the city’s largest private employers and violate state and federal law, sparking lawsuits against the city at a time when “Los Angeles should be focusing on recovery.”

The Hotel Assn. of Los Angeles also attacked the proposal, calling it “a direct slap” to their industry that would leave them vulnerable to lawsuits when the crisis subsides.

Heather Rozman, executive director of the association, said hotels should have the flexibility to decide who to rehire first — for instance, bringing back a newer employee who is a single parent before a longtime employee who has paid off their house.

The law “really just micromanages the hiring process,” she said.


The council also voted to draft a “worker retention” ordinance that would require businesses that change owners to rehire and retain workers employed by the previous company. That measure is designed to prevent more turmoil for employees during the pandemic.

The proposal is also limited to hotels and other targeted industries.