Hotel Owner October 2017 | Page 10

MONTH IN REVIEW MONTH IN REVIEW www.hotelowner.co.uk TOP 3 FROM THE WEBSITE 1. Ibis ditches check-in desks with new programme 2. Woman dies following Legionnaires outbreak at Ludlow hotel 3. Prominent Oxford hotelier dies at home ORGANISATION New hotel alliance of 500 properties formed Some 500 hoteliers have joined a new, worldwide hotel organisation made up of privately-owned properties. It is the merger of two existing hotel groups – Private Hotels Europe that represents more than 300 private owned hotels in Germany, Sweden, Austria and Denmark and Charme & Caratère Hotels that represents over 270 hotels all over the world. The new organisation will be named ‘Global Alliance of Private Hotels’ and consequently replaces the former Private Hotels Europe. Charme & Caratère Hotels is headquartered in France, but also represents hotels outside of Europe. Besides Charme & Caratère Hotels, ‘Global Alliance of Private Hotels’ also includes the hotel chains Ringhotels in Germany, Petit Hotel in Sweden, Naturidyll in Austria and Small Danish Hotels in Denmark. 10 www.hotelowner.co.uk 1 2 3 4 5 REGULATION HEALTH UK hospitality group Whitbread’s withdrawal from the Ethical Trading Initiative (ETI) just 18 months after it was granted foundation stage membership, is a “slap in the face” to its 50,000-strong UK workforce, trade union Unite has said. The ETI board of directors were informed of the resignation of the Premier Inn and Costa Coffee owner at a board meeting on 14 September. . Unite has been highly critical of Whitbread’s apparent refusal in the last year to accept that the ETI’s nine ‘good labour practice’ codes apply equally to its directly employed UK workforce as to workers in its overseas supply chain. In particular, base code two on freedom of association and the right to bargain collectively. Rhys McCarthy, Unite national officer said: “Whitbread’s resignation from the ETI is a snub to the workforce. We had high hopes that its membership would open the door to better union relations in the notoriously anti-union and exploitative UK hospitality sector. “It is deeply disappointing that Whitbread would rather pull the plug on its application to become an accredited ETI member, than work with Unite to become a genuinely ethical and sustainable employer to its UK workforce.” He added: “The UK hospitality industry is fundamentally unethical. It is built on low pay, long hours and exploitation; workers have few rights and little power. It’s time for the industry to stop seeing unions as ‘the enemy within’ and start working with us to change and improve the way it operates.” A call for a new approach to tackling Legionnaire’s disease following the death of a woman at a hotel has been put forward by training and consultancy specialist, Develop Training (DTL). The victim, who was in her 60s, stayed at the Feathers Hotel in Ludlow in July. Another woman in her 70s was also diagnosed but has since recovered. Laboratory tests showed links between theLegionella bacteria found in the hotel’s water samples and the two women. The hotel has since voluntarily closed temporarily on advice from Public Health England and Shropshire Council. Steve