-

2026 World Cup: Rose Bowl Labor Standards Receive an “F” from UNITE HERE Local 11

UNITE HERE Local 11 rates Los Angeles venues under consideration for the FIFA World Cup

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Today, UNITE HERE Local 11, the union of hospitality workers in Southern California, released a scorecard rating labor standards for employees at major soccer arenas in Los Angeles. This scorecard comes in advance of the Federation Internationale de Football Association’s (“FIFA”) planned June 16, 2022 announcement of the cities and stadiums it has selected for the 2026 World Cup.

Local 11 assessed each stadium in light of eight key labor standards criteria for employees in concessions and premium areas at arenas within Los Angeles: health and safety, employment security, employee benefits, protection against wage theft, diversity outreach, protection against unfair discipline, employee voice, and protections for immigrant workers. For each criterion, an arena was given 1 point if, based on the information available, the employer had in place an enforceable agreement with worker representatives.

SoFi Stadium, a potential World Cup venue, received 8 out of 8 points and an “A” rating, the highest possible score. There, unionized employees enjoy enforceable commitments to health and safety training, affordable healthcare, access to low-cost legal services and job training, protection against arbitrary termination and wage theft, and unfettered access to union representatives.

By contrast, the Rose Bowl, a nonunion venue also under consideration by FIFA, received 0 out of 8 points and an “F” grade. The Rose Bowl uses unpaid volunteers to help run its concessions stands, performing work that, at other stadiums in the area, would be performed by paid workers earning family-sustaining incomes. Volunteers and the workers employed by Levy Restaurants—the concessions operator at the Rose Bowl—also lack access to the same affordable healthcare plan, job security rights, protections for immigrant workers, safety mechanisms, non-discrimination commitments, and support for training for underrepresented communities that other stadium workers enjoy through collective bargaining agreements. Additionally, Rose Bowl workers employed by Levy lack access to union representation at the worksite or critical protections to enable them to freely organize.

FIFA has thus far failed to commit to selecting venues that guarantee the right of workers to freely organize and provide prevailing employment standards. Earlier this year, Local 11 filed a complaint alleging that FIFA has failed to undertake “human rights due diligence” in its selection of venues in Los Angeles for the 2026 World Cup. The union filed its complaint in Switzerland, home of FIFA, with the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (“OECD”), an international body that has established human rights and business conduct standards for multinational corporations.

“As FIFA finalizes its selections for the 2026 World Cup, it must heed the calls of workers and select venues that uphold prevailing standards and protect labor rights,” says Local 11 Co-President Kurt Petersen. “We urge FIFA to live up to its human rights responsibilities and insist upon a World Cup where workers are treated with dignity and fairness.”

UNITE HERE Local 11 is a labor union representing over 32,000 hospitality workers in Southern California and Arizona who work in hotels, restaurants, universities, convention centers, and airports.

Contacts

Maria Hernandez | 623-340-8047 | mhernandez@unitehere11.org

UNITE HERE Local 11


Release Versions

Contacts

Maria Hernandez | 623-340-8047 | mhernandez@unitehere11.org

More News From UNITE HERE Local 11

UNITE HERE Local 11: PrimeFlight Acquisition of GAT/Sky Café Throws Phoenix Sky Harbor Inflight Catering Workers’ Lives in Turmoil for Second Time in Three Months

PHOENIX--(BUSINESS WIRE)--On February 5, private equity firm Atlantic Street Capital announced it had sold GAT/Sky Café to PrimeFlight, which is owned by private equity firms Sterling Group and Capitol Meridian Partners. The transaction marks the second time in three months that private equity firms have thrown hundreds of Phoenix Sky Harbor inflight catering workers’ lives in limbo. On November 4, 2025, LSG Sky Chefs fired about 200 UNITE HERE Local 11 members connected to the firm’s loss of a...

UNITE HERE Local 11 Calls on Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission to Block Acquisition of Atlantic Street Capital-owned GAT/Sky Café by PrimeFlight, owned by Sterling Group and Capitol Meridian Partners

PHOENIX--(BUSINESS WIRE)--On February 4, 2026, UNITE HERE Local 11 called on authorities from the Federal Trade Commission and U.S. Department of Justice to block PrimeFlight’s acquisition of GAT/Sky Café pending an investigation on whether the move will decrease competitiveness in the aviation industry and lead to higher costs passed on to consumers. Please find the complaint letter here. PrimeFlight and its network of subsidiaries provide major airlines and airports general aviation aircraft...

UNITE HERE Local 11 Calls on City of Los Angeles to Investigate Allegations of Retaliation Against Airline Catering Workers Who Reported Sexual Harassment

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--UNITE HERE Local 11, together with the University of California at Irvine’s Law and Organizing Clinic, has filed a complaint calling on the City of Los Angeles Bureau of Contract Administration (BCA) and Human Rights Department to launch a full investigation into Flying Food Group, an airline catering company operating at Los Angeles International Airport, following allegations that the company retaliated against workers who reported sexual harassment and discrimin...
Back to Newsroom