Skip to main content

Marriott, Alexa, & the Rising Fear of Automation in the Workplace



Automation in some industries has become a major talking point over the past few years as employers seek to offset rising labor costs by eliminating some jobs and replacing those workers with robots, machines, and other automated equipment.  It is worth noting that while manufacturing positions have a long history of automation, some positions (including in the hotel industry) have largely avoided being phased out by the increase in technology in the workplace. 

However, thousands of workers at Marriott have recently voted to authorize their union, Unite Here, to strike at locations stretching from Waikiki Beach to San Diego to Detroit and all the way to Boston.  Their reasoning?  In part, asking the hotel chain to adopt procedures to protect workers affected by new technologies.  This is likely due in part to an agreement that Marriott reached with Amazon to have the Echo put in hotel rooms across Marriott's properties.  For those unaware, the Echo is a voice controlled personal assistant device that responds to the name "Alexa".  This device can communicate with a person, play music, make lists, set alarms, and provide weather/traffic information, among other tasks.  It follows that the Echo could also be programmed to serve as a check in service, take room service orders, and make reservations at restaurant, among other tasks currently covered by hotel staff and concierges at hotels.

It is important to have some perspective here, as studies have found that each new robot deployed in the workplace cuts 5.6 jobs and reduces wages by .5 percent.  As well, last year the McKinsey Global Institute issued a report that projected technology would create a 30 percent decline in jobs in food service and lodging up to 2030.  That projected decline would be on par with the 38 percent decline in manufacturing jobs from 1960 to 2012 (although it is not clear that automation was entirely responsible for that 38 percent decline over that period of time).

With that being said, with the Echo gaining a foothold in the hotel chain, workers at Marriott (and elsewhere) are starting to take the threat of automation seriously.  Is there a solution that will make all parties happy?  Maybe, but maybe not.  For the time being, let this most recent example of automation in the workplace serve as a reminder to employers and employees alike:  More and more jobs are becoming vulnerable to automation.  As Unite Here's President put it, "The question is whether workers will be partners in its [the technology's] deployment or bystanders that get run over by it."



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

NLRB: Discussion Among Employees About Tip Pooling is Protected Concerted Activity

  This Advice Memorandum from the National Labor Relations Board’s Associate General Counsel, Jayme Sophir, addressed whether employees which discussed and complained about tip pooling at work constituted protected concerted activity. In relevant part, an employer in New York operated a chain of steakhouses.  While tip pooling was in place at these steakhouses, some of the employees objected to it on the grounds that it was not transparent and improperly divided tips among the workers.  Employees were told not to complain or talk to each other about the tip pool and were told that doing so would endanger their jobs.  Despite the employer later attempting to provide some clarity as to how the tips were being divided, rancor still existed among some employees.  At one point, the employees were told by a general manager that some employees that had been talking about the tip pool were “cleared out” and the employer would continue to do so. In the Advice Memorandum,...

What I've Been Reading This Week

Recently, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Commissioner, Chai Feldblum, had her re-nomination on the brink, after Utah Republican Senator Mike Lee took steps to block it .  Readers might have heard that late last week, Commissioner Feldblum's re-nomination quietly slipped away and she tweeted out a thank you to supporters and friends, acknowledging that her time at the EEOC was over.  While there has not been much in the way of a further update in regard to that ongoing saga, we wait to see how things will play out at the EEOC, now that it has lost a quorum until additional Commissioners are confirmed by the Senate. For the time being, there are other developments for readers to review this week.  In particular, I call attention to the article on managing a wage & hour audit by the Department of Labor as well as steps an employer can take to better ensure compliance with the ADA. As always, below are a couple articles that caught my eye this week. ...

Senator Bernie Sanders To Introduce Bill Requiring Large Corporations To Pay For Federal Assistance Programs

Next week, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders is set to introduce legislation which would require large employers such as Walmart, Amazon, and McDonald's to fully cover the cost of food stamps, public housing, Medicaid, and other federal assistance programs that their employees receive.  Senator Sanders has stated that the goal is to force these large employers to pay their employees a living wage and cut back on the nearly $150 billion in taxpayer dollars that go toward funding these federal programs every year. As for the specifics, a 100% tax on government benefits received would be imposed on government benefits received by workers at companies with 500 or more employees.  For instance, if a Walmart employee received $500 in food stamps, Walmart would be taxed $500. To call this proposed legislation groundbreaking would be an understatement.  I would expect that Senator Sanders, an Independent that caucuses with Democrats, is going to face an uphill battle gett...