American Hotel & Lodging Association, Apps. v. City Of Seattle, Res.

432 P.3d 434
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 24, 2018
Docket77918-4
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 432 P.3d 434 (American Hotel & Lodging Association, Apps. v. City Of Seattle, Res.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Hotel & Lodging Association, Apps. v. City Of Seattle, Res., 432 P.3d 434 (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

AMERICAN HOTEL & LODGING No. 77918-4-1 ASSOCIATION, SEATTLE HOTEL cf)CD ASSOCIATION, and WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE HOSPITALITY ASSOCIATION, rfl PUBLISHED OPINION rn Appellants, .F Fo >-• u rfl V. cf, `4? CITY OF SEATTLE, UNITE HERE! LOCAL 8, and SEATTLE PROTECTS WOMEN,

Respondents. FILED: December 24, 2018

ANDRUS, J. — In November 2016, the citizens of Seattle voted to adopt

Initiative 124 (1-124), now codified at Seattle Municipal Code ch.14.25. Three hotel

associations challenge the initiative as a violation of the "single subject" rule of

RCW 35A.12.130 and article IV, section 7 of the Seattle City Charter. We conclude

the ordinance contains provisions not germane one to another and, therefore,

violates the single subject rule. We reverse.

FACTS

On November 8, 2016, Seattle voters approved 1-124. The ballot title for

this initiative read as follows:

Initiative 124 concerns health, safety and labor standards for Seattle hotel employees. No. 77918-4-1/2

If passed, this initiative would require certain sized hotel-employers to further protect employees against assault, sexual harassment, and injury by retaining lists of accused guests among other measures; improve access to healthcare; limit workloads; and provide limited job security for employees upon hotel ownership transfer. Requirements except assault protections are waivable through collective bargaining. The City may investigate violations. Persons claiming injury are protected from retaliation and may sue hotel-employers. Penalties go to City enforcement, affected employees, and the complainant.

Should this measure be enacted into law?

Yes No

The initiative passed with 76.59 percent of the vote. The City certified the results

on November 29, 2016, and the initiative went into effect the following day.1

The initiative has seven parts. Part 1 is intended to protect hotel employees

from violent assault and sexual harassment by guests. SMC 14.25.020. If a hotel

employee is assigned to work in a guest room without other employees present,

the employer must provide that employee with a panic button to use in an

emergency. SMC 14.25.030. Hotel employers must maintain a list of names of

any guest accused of assaulting, sexually assaulting, or sexually harassing hotel

employees. SMC 14.25.040(A). Any guest accused of such misconduct must

remain on the list for five years, and hotel employers must notify other employees

assigned to an accused guest's room and warn them to exercise caution when

entering that room. SMC 14.25.040(A), (C). If an accusation is supported by a

1 The ordinance authorized and directed the Office of Labor Standards to promulgate rules consistent with the new chapter. SMC 14.25.150(D)(2). The rules became effective in July 2018. SHRR 150-010 to -300.

- 2- No. 77918-4-1/3

sworn statement "or other evidence,"2 the hotel employer must bar the guest from

the hotel for three years. SMC 14.25.040(B). Part 1 also requires hotel employers

to post signs notifying guests of the protections afforded by 1-124. SMC 14.25.050.

Lastly, Part 1 provides that after an employee accuses a guest of sexual assault

or harassment, a hotel employer must reassign the employee to a different work

area upon request, provide paid time off to allow the employee to contact the

police, a counselor, or an advisor, and, with the employee's consent, report any

accusations of criminal conduct by guests to law enforcement. SMC 14.25.060.

Part 2 seeks to protect hotel workers from on-the-job injury. SMC

14.25.070. SMC 14.25.080 requires hotel employers to provide and use safety

devices and safeguards, as well as "use work practices, methods, processes, and

means"that are "reasonably adequate to make their workplaces safe." Under rules

adopted by the Seattle Office of Labor Standards in July 2018, the workplace

safety requirements of SMC 14.25.080 "must at least meet those outlined by the

Washington Industrial Safety and Health Act" (W1SHA), RCW ch. 49.17 and its

administrative regulations. SHRR 150-070.

SMC 14.25.090 requires hotel employers to protect their employees from

exposure to hazardous chemicals by controlling chemical agents, protecting

employees from having contact with or being exposed to chemical agents, and

providing employees with information on hazardous chemicals in their work areas.3

2 "Other evidence" is not defined in the ordinance. SHRR 150-050(3) defines "other evidence" as "evidence other than statements of the victim, witnesses, or other persons, that tends to support an accusation of assault, sexual assault, or sexual harassment against a guest," including "physical evidence, audio and video recordings or photographs of events, occurrences, injuries, incident scenes, or other similar evidence." 3 SHRR 150-080 provides that employers "must use methods of controlling chemical agents that at least meet the minimum requirements" of WISHA and its administrative regulations. SHRR 150-

- 3- No. 77918-4-1/4

SMC 14.25.100 prohibits "large hotels," defined as hotels with 100 or more

guest rooms,4 from requiring housekeepers to clean more than 5,000 square feet

of floor space in an eight-hour workday unless the hotel pays the worker time and

a half. Under administrative regulation, an employee has a right to refuse the

employer's request to clean more than the maximum square footage allowed in

the ordinance. SHRR 150-140.

Part 3 is intended to improve access to medical care for hotel employees.

SMC 14.25.110. Under SMC 14.25.120, "large hotel" employers must provide

healthcare subsidies to low-wage employees or provide health care coverage

equal to at least a gold-level policy on the Washington Health Care Benefit

Exchange.

Part 4 provides job security to hotel workers by requiring hotels undergoing

a change in ownership or control to maintain a list of employees, based on

seniority. SMC 14.25.130. The new hotel owner must hire its employees from this

list for six months and retain employees hired from this list for at least 90 days,

unless there is good cause for termination. SMC 14.25.140.

Part 5 is entitled "Enforcement." SMC 14.25.150(A) makes it a violation for

any hotel employer to interfere with any right protected by the ordinance or to

discharge any employee exercising rights under the ordinance. If an employer

takes an adverse action within 90 days of that employee's exercise of rights under

the ordinance, there is a rebuttable presumption of retaliation. SMC

090 similarly incorporates by reference the WISHA requirements for protecting employees from the hazard of contact with or exposure to chemical agents. 4 SMC 14.25.160.

-4- No. 77918-4-1/5

14.25.150(A)(5). Part 5 also prohibits hotel employers from threatening to report

an employee's suspected citizenship or immigration status. SMC 14.25.150(A)(4).

SMC 14.25.150(B) mandates that hotel employers give written notification to each

employee of their rights under the ordinance in each language spoken by 10 or

more employees.

SMC 14.25.150(C) creates a "private enforcement action." It provides that

"any person claiming injury" from a violation of any part of the ordinance is entitled

to bring a lawsuit in King County Superior Court or in any other court of competent

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432 P.3d 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-hotel-lodging-association-apps-v-city-of-seattle-res-washctapp-2018.