A Model for Measuring Fair Labour Justice in Hotels: Design for the Spanish Case
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
2.1. Sustainable Development, Sustainability and CSR
2.2. International Initiatives on Fair Hotels and Labour Practice/Working Ethics Indicators
Fair Labour and Working Ethics Indicators
2.3. Conceptual Delimitation of the HJLR Project
- Occupy a whole building or a fully independent part of it, with independent facilities, entrances, elevators, and stairs for exclusive use.
- With the exception of hotel-residences, provide the public with accommodation and meals services, subject or otherwise to a full-board regime, according to the clients’ preferences.
- Have available individual rooms comprising at least 10% of all the available rooms.”
3. Methodology
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- Acquire knowledge and understanding of the product’s users, and the situation or the problem at hand.
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- Develop empathy toward sponsors and users (i.e., hotel managers and hotel clients) by observation.
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- Generate a standard user for whom the model is designed, thus defining the point of view from which to develop the design.
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- Generate as many ideas as possible.
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- Build a prototype using the most promising ideas.
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- Allow users to test the prototype, collect information on their interactions, and learn from the data obtained. In order to enable this, it was necessary to let users test the model, and gather information from the interaction.
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- A focus group is a form of group interview (i.e., a qualitative research method). In this case, the moderator asked representatives of the CCOO and UGT questions relating to what they intended to achieve with the initiative. An observer monitored the interviews to gain insight into new perspectives.
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- We used various search engines and specialized databases to gather information on similar initiatives and then benchmarked such information. We adopted any aspects we found to be of interest. To this end we used international sources such as the GRI indicators, ISO 26,000 standard or systems created in other countries.
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- The Internet has become an immense source of additional information, complementing traditional research techniques and helping to better understand and reach future users. We reviewed scientific articles on labour justice practices, but also included news reports and opinion pieces on labour justice issues in the hotel sector, as well as interviews with key representatives of public administrations, consumers, trade unions, business organizations and so on.
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- We held a 90-min brainstorming session using post-it sticky notes to gather and visualise the ideas generated.
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- In a subsequent 60-min session, we used the Scamper method to look at the area of interest from another point of view and redefine some of the ideas that that emerged during the brainstorming session.
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- An initial meeting was held in which the operating committee presented the prototype to the permanent technical committee. Along with the team, they reviewed the steps that had been taken to reach that stage (i.e., empathizing, defining, devising, and prototyping). A simplified outline of the route we had followed helped us to obtain the corresponding feedback.
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- Their contributions led to a second meeting in which the prototype was approved. It was then decided to transfer the final product to the operating committees of the two trade unions to test the model and the functionality of the website.
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- A third meeting was held and, based on the new results, small adjustments were made to fine-tune the solutions that would meet the needs and desires of the sponsors.
4. Results
- Employer-employee relations: issues related to employer-employee relations, such as consultation practices with employees and their representatives, and the announcement of significant operational changes.
- Employment: Hiring, recruitment, retention, working conditions, and other company-related practices.
- Health and Safety at the workplace: The analysis and control of health and safety risks, training on these issues, the reporting and investigation of health and safety incidents, and adherence to strict standards to achieve a safe and healthy work environment. This category deals with the prevention of occupational hazards and the creation of a healthy workplace that fosters the well-being of workers.
- Training and professional development: All issues related to the training of employees, skills improvement, performance and professional development assessments, and professional development programs that promote continuous education, long-term employability and managing the end of professional careers due to retirement or dismissal.
- Diversity and Equal Opportunities: Equal treatment and opportunities for men and women at work. This aspect can bring significant benefits to workers and the company itself. For example, employers can access a wider and more diverse set of potential personnel.
- Pay equity: This category of indicators is used to assess whether the amounts allocated for worker pay are distributed equally over a set period of time and according to the merits and productivity of the workers.
- Employer-employee relations (15%)
- 1.1
- Compliance with the collective labour agreements of the sector or similar company agreements (30%)
- Definition: All hotel establishments must apply the pertinent collective labour agreements. If company agreements already exist, these must at least fully abide by the sectorial collective labour agreements on social and economic issues. Regarding subcontracting and outsourcing, the company must comply with the conditions of the applicable collective labour agreement.
- Measurement scale: Compliant = 1; Noncompliant = exclusion.
- Person/body in charge: Company or trade union representation.
- Source of information/verification: Checking four to five payrolls of workers in different positions, and verifying adherence to the collective labour agreement, particularly adherence to the base wage and pay supplements set out in the agreement. If there are subcontracted positions, check the payrolls of these workers on these specific points.
- 1.2
- Freedom of worker association (30%)
- Definition: No resolutions or final judgements made during the last 3 years to restrict freedom of worker association.
- Measurement scale: Complaint = 1; Non-compliant = exclusion.
- Person/body in charge: Company or trade union representation.
- Source of information/verification: Searching for possible court records by company/establishment. Consultations with our teams of lawyers.
- 1.3
- Trade union representation (20%)
- Definition: Presence of trade union representation that can freely exercise its functions.
- Measurement scale: No representation = 0. No representation in the establishment, but representation in the hotel chain = 2. Representation in the establishment = 4.
- Person/body in charge: Company or trade union representation.
- Source of information/verification: To be verified in trade union elections records and regional records (electoral office), and then compared with our own data.
- 1.4
- Information and consultation with the legal representatives of the workers (LRW) (20%)
- Definition: Regular compliance with the obligation to inform and consult the company or union representative.
- Measurement scale: Compliant = 1; Non-compliant = 0.
- Person/body in charge: Company or trade union representation.
- Source of information/verification: Check what regular or specific information has been given to the LRW during the previous year and that a proof note was issued. Cross-check with the LRW.
- Employment (20%)
- 2.1
- Permanent and temporary staff (60%)
- Definition: Ratio of permanent and discontinuous permanent contracts per total number of workers in the establishment.
- Measurement scale: Less than 60% or no information provided = 0; 60–65% = 1; 65–70% = 2; 70–80% = 3; 80–100% = 4
- Person/body in charge: Management of the establishment.
- Source of information/verification: Information provided by the company, cross-checked with social security documents and similar information.
- 2.2
- Full-time and part-time staff (40%)
- Definition: Percentage of full-time contracts.
- Measurement scale: Less than 70% or no information provided = 0; 70–75% = 1; 75–80% = 2; 80–90% = 3; 90–100% = 4
- Person/body in charge: Management of the establishment.
- Source of information/verification: Information provided by the company, cross-checked with social security documents and similar information.
- Workplace health and safety (15%)
- 3.1
- Safety representatives (25%)
- Definition: Presence of safety representatives, or joint management-staff health and safety committees, which are established to help monitor and advise on workplace health and safety programs.
- Measurement scale: Compliant = 1; Non-compliant = 0.
- Person/body in charge: Management of the establishment.
- Source of information/verification: Minutes of the Health and Safety Committee (HSS) meetings, or in the absence of a committee due to the size of the company, information and participation provided to the safety representatives. All this information should refer to the previous year.
- 3.2
- Plans and preventive measures for workplace health and safety (25%)
- Definition: Workers have the right to effective protection in this area, which must be achieved through the prevention of occupational hazards, including measures such as a plan for the prevention of occupational hazards, risk assessment (including psychosocial risks), and health monitoring.
- Measurement scale: No plans or preventive measures = 0; risk assessment = 1; occupational hazards prevention plan = 2; existence of improvements (counselling, prevention, and risk assessment programs) = 3; improvements agreed with company’s or union representation = 4.
- Person/body in charge: Management of the establishment.
- Source of information/verification: Copy of the required documentation (e.g., prevention plans, risk assessment, and planning of prevention activities), minutes of the health and safety committee meetings, communications to the workers.
- 3.3
- Temporary disability (20%)
- Definition: Percentage of temporary disabilities caused by common and professional illnesses in the last 3 years.
- Measurement scale: Less than 3% = 4; 3–5% = 3; 4–8% = 2; 8–10% = 1; more than 10% = 0.
- Person/body in charge: The company, cross-checked with company or union representation.
- Source of information/verification: Statistical data provided by the mutual insurance provider to the company, and by the company to the safety representatives or health and safety coordinators. Verification controls by the mutual insurer of the illness or accident alleged by the worker.
- 3.4
- Rate of workplace accidents (30%)
- Definition: Rate of accidents at work in the last 3 years.
- Measurement scale: No incidents = 4; accident rate of more than 5% every year = 1; fatal accidents = 0
- Person/body in charge: The company, cross-checked with company or union representation.
- Source of information/verification: Reports provided by the mutual insurance provider to the company. For workplace accidents, the “registro Delta” (i.e., the Spanish system for communicating accidents at work). For occupational diseases, the CEPROSS records (i.e., the equivalent system for occupational illnesses), which adheres to current data protection legislation. Indices of general and extreme accidents.
- Training and professional development (15%)
- 4.1
- Training and professional development plan (50%)
- Definition: The existence of a training plan that, in addition to training actions, includes a study of training needs and an assessment of the training received by the staff.
- Measurement scale: No plan = 0; a training plan = 1; workers participate in the design and follow-up of the training and information plan = 2; more than 30% of training time during working hours = 3; if professional development plan available = + 1.
- Person/body in charge: The company, cross-checked with company or union representation.
- Source of information/verification: Information provided by the company, cross-checked with the LRW, with details of subsidized courses or not.
- 4.2
- Average training rate (50%)
- Definition: Percentage of the workforce that has received training.
- Measurement scale: Less than 25% = 0; 25–50% = 1; 50–70% = 2; more than 70% = 3; the number of average training hours received by the worker exceeds 20 hours per year = +1.
- Person/body in charge: The company, cross-checked with company or union representation.
- Source of information/verification: Training data presented by the company, verified with information from the LRW. List of participants in training plan, used to cross-check the workforce census to verify if all workers have participated in a training plan and in what type of plan.
- Diversity and equal opportunities (20%)
- 5.1
- Measures to improve work-life balance or the existence of an equality plan (30%)
- Definition: Measures implemented to promote an adequate work-life balance, or existence of an equality plan.
- Measurement scale: No = 0; Yes = 1.
- Person/body in charge: The union representative or staff committee.
- Source of information/verification: Verify if there are agreements with the LRW on this issue. If there is an equality plan, it should have been negotiated with the LRW. Use the minutes of the meetings to verify that the monitoring committee meets with sufficient periodicity for an effective follow-up. If the plan comes from the parent company, check if the hotel in question has implemented it and its effect. If there is no plan, check what measures have been verifiably implemented and announced. Check that the LRW has been informed and that there has been follow-up on how these measures have been implemented.
- 5.2
- Gender pay gap (40%)
- Definition: Ratio of total wage expenses between women and men.
- Measurement scale: If more than 60% = 0; if less than 60% = 1.
- Person/body in charge: Management of the establishment.
- Source of information/verification: Company information and verification with social security records. See the information sent to the LRW.
- 5.3
- Gender ratio in staff (30%)
- Definition: Breakdown of the number of workers by gender in each of the three professional categories included in the Collective Labour Agreement for the Hospitality Sector in Spain (ALEH).
- Measurement scale: 45–55% = 4; 40–60% = 3; 35–65% = 2; 30–70% = 1; less than 30% = 0.
- Person/body in charge: Management of the establishment.
- Source of information/verification: Company information and verification with social security records. See the information sent to the LRW.
- Pay equity (15%)
- 6.1
- Highest wage compared to the average wage (50%)
- Definition: Ratio of the highest wage to the average wage of the staff.
- Measurement scale: If greater than 3 = 0; If less than 3 = 1.
- Person/body in charge: Management of the establishment.
- Source of information/verification: Company information and verification with social security records. See the information sent to the LRW.
- 6.2
- Highest wage compared to lowest wage (50%)
- Definition: Ratio of the highest wage to the lowest wage.
- Measurement scale: Between 6 and 12 times = 1; more than 12 = 0.
- Person/body in charge: Management of the establishment.
- Source of information/verification: Company information and verification with social security records. See the information sent to the LRW.
5. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Hotel Chain | Report Drafted by the Hotel | GRI | Ethics Code UNWTO | Internal Ethics Code | Hotels | Rooms |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Meliá Hotels International | 2010–2018 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 179 | 47.253 |
NH Hotel Group | 2010–2018 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 253 | 43.070 |
Barceló Hotel Group | 2013–2017 | No | Yes | Yes | 185 | 38.283 |
Eurostars Hotel Company (Hotusa Group) | No | No | No | No | 61 | 31.537 |
RIU Hotels & Resorts | 2018 | No | Yes | Yes | 65 | 21.936 |
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García Mestanza, J.; Cerezo Medina, A.; Cruz Morato, M.A. A Model for Measuring Fair Labour Justice in Hotels: Design for the Spanish Case. Sustainability 2019, 11, 4639. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11174639
García Mestanza J, Cerezo Medina A, Cruz Morato MA. A Model for Measuring Fair Labour Justice in Hotels: Design for the Spanish Case. Sustainability. 2019; 11(17):4639. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11174639
Chicago/Turabian StyleGarcía Mestanza, Josefa, Alfonso Cerezo Medina, and Marco Antonio Cruz Morato. 2019. "A Model for Measuring Fair Labour Justice in Hotels: Design for the Spanish Case" Sustainability 11, no. 17: 4639. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11174639
APA StyleGarcía Mestanza, J., Cerezo Medina, A., & Cruz Morato, M. A. (2019). A Model for Measuring Fair Labour Justice in Hotels: Design for the Spanish Case. Sustainability, 11(17), 4639. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11174639