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Ballot dropbox ban a barrier in SD primary; former President Donald Trump says jail threat won't stop him from violating gag order; EBT 'skimming' on the rise, more Ohioans turn to food banks; new maps show progress on NY lead service line replacement.

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Hamas accepts a ceasefire deal amid warnings of a ground attack on Rafah by Israel, some faculty members defend protesters as colleges cancel graduation ceremonies, and Bernie Sanders announces his re-election run.

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Bidding begins soon for Wyoming's elk antlers, Southeastern states gained population in the past year, small rural energy projects are losing out to bigger proposals, and a rural arts cooperative is filling the gap for schools in Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

Midwest Hotel Workers Speak Out Against Guest Misconduct

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Monday, June 6, 2011   

MADISON, Wis. - Wisconsin's hotels and motels are filling up this summer, and the people who work as housekeepers at those facilities say it's time to break the silence about what they claim is the routine sexual misconduct they face on their jobs. In the wake of two high-profile alleged sexual assaults on housekeepers in New York City, hotel workers in Wisconsin and several other states are launching a campaign to end the silence.

Organizer Rachel Sulkes with the hotel workers union UNITE HERE says the offending guests will typically claim they didn't hear a housekeeper's knock.

"The housekeeper will go into the room and the guest will actually be in the room – often essentially undressed, naked – exposing themselves. Just last week, one person who made a room service delivery said a guest pressed himself up against her."

Hotels need to improve worker security in general and do more to encourage staff to report sexual harassment by guests, she adds. Sulkes also notes that the potential for incidents of sexual misconduct is far higher during the night shift, when there are fewer hotel staff around.

"One of our proposals is that hotels not send a woman alone to a room at night – that they work in pairs or in teams, that they have somebody else on the floor with them - so that, if something should happen, they have some backup."

She would also like to see hotels do away with traditional skirt-style uniforms for women and adopt a pants-and-tunic style instead.

The group launched the Midwest campaign in Chicago last week.




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