Casino workers plan to block traffic near a major
entrance to Atlantic City, New Jersey, on Wednesday to protest attempts to
terminate health benefits for union members at the Trump Taj Mahal casino,
according to union officials.
The demonstration, which the union representing the
workers said could bring arrests, comes on the 10-year anniversary of a similar
protest that closed seven Atlantic City casinos for over a month in a labor
dispute.
Trump Entertainment Resorts, the owner of the Taj Mahal, filed
for bankruptcy last month and is seeking bankruptcy court permission to
terminate health benefits and a pension plan. The company has said it will
close in November if a deal is not reached on benefits and taxes.
If the Taj Mahal closes in November, it will become the
fifth Atlantic City casino to close this year. The city started the year with
12 casinos.
While the Taj Mahal itself is several blocks away from
the protest site, the demonstration will take place near the Tropicana, owned
by billionaire investor Carl Icahn.
Icahn, Trump Entertainment's main creditor, has proposed
converting the debt owed to him into ownership of the company.
"This is bigger than just one property," said
Ben Begleiter, a spokesman for Unite Here Local 54, which represents about
1,100 of the Taj Mahal's 3,000 employees under a collective bargaining
agreement.
In 2004, nearly 100 union demonstrators were arrested
after blocking the streets near the off-ramp to the Atlantic City Expressway
during a 34-day strike at seven Atlantic City casinos. The expressway serves as
the major highway entrance into the city, which sits on a barrier island.
Source: Reuters
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