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Boycott the Hyatt!

Unfortunately, Hyatt doesn't value its room cleaning staff one cent above minimum wage, because what they've done is to outsource all the housekeeping jobs to a minimum wage company that provides no benefits to its workers. If that's the priority Hyatt places on its room cleaning services, do you want to stay there again?

Here's a link to the WBZ story on the layoffs. Read more

Specific city layoffs threatened

Globe reports:

Mayor Thomas M. Menino today will propose laying off 565 city workers, including public school teachers, police officers, and librarians, cutbacks that Boston officials said are needed to help balance the $2.4 billion city budget. [...] Signori said that if more unions agree to wage freezes and if stimulus money arrives in time, some jobs slated for elimination in the mayor's budget could be saved.

Tweeter closes without a squeak; employees left with no crossover

Aside from the tragic lack of punnage in the Boston Globe front-of-website story, the Globe's lame coverage neglects to dig into the matter with any kind of depth. Amusingly enough, there is a similar but far more detailed story in the business section. Still, plenty missing. For example: Why is the Massachusetts Attorney General "aware of the situation and reviewing it"? Well, this is a guess, but probably due to the WARN Act (regulating minimum notice to mass-terminated employees), MGL C149 S148 (employees must get payment in-hand day-of-termination for all wages), and state consumer law (when it declared "all sales final.")

The Globe also fails to note that 1.Tweeter laid off about 650 people in 2007 when it closed 48 stores, which also may have been a WARN act violation; 2.Last month someone filed a lawsuit in Delaware citing the WARN Act; 3.Liquidation was a family affair in 2007, as the chairman of Tweeter and the Managing Director of the liquidation firm (who also sits on Tweeter's board) are brothers (and guess what: another director on Tweeter's board heads up Hilco Merchant Resources, one of the liquidators of Circuit City and Linens and Things); 4.Tweeter and its liquidation firm tried to sucker people into a "free gas" promotion that was probably worthless given they were already under Chapter 11; 5.Tweeter filed for Chapter 11 in June of 2007.

No wonder the Globe can't sell papers...

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