Industry associations respond to Los Angeles Olympic Wage Ordinance

The Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder confirmed that the referendum to delay the city’s Olympic Wage Ordinance fell short of the required valid signatures. The ordinance will now take effect, raising hotel worker wages from $22.50 in 2025 to $25 in 2026, $27.50 in 2027 and $30 in 2028. A mandatory healthcare benefits payment will also begin in 2026.

Industry organizations issued statements in protest of the ordinance. "This ruling is a major setback for Los Angeles' small business hotel owners, who will shoulder the burden of this well-intentioned but misguided mandate," AAHOA Chairman Kamalash (KP) Patel said in one such statement. "Instead of working meaningfully with industry leaders, the city rushed forward with a policy that ignores economic realities and jeopardizes the very jobs and businesses that keep this city's hospitality sector strong and driving the city’s economic growth. Family-owned hotels now face impossible choices—cutting staff, halting hiring, or raising rates—just as Los Angeles should be preparing to welcome millions of visitors from around the world in celebration of the World Cup and 2028 Olympics. You can't build a world-class city by breaking the backs of the small businesses that make it run."

“AAHOA Members are proud to create jobs and opportunities in their communities, but this ordinance imposes an unsustainable cost increase that will ripple across the entire city," AAHOA President & CEO Laura Lee Blake added. "Even with a delayed rollout, the mandate represents a 70 percent wage hike above California's 2025 minimum wage. This approach threatens to strip more than $114 million each year from hotels, funds that should be invested instead into keeping workers employed and ensuring Los Angeles remains a competitive, thriving global destination. This mandate raises the risk of closures, layoffs, and a weaker Los Angeles."

“Tens of thousands of Los Angeles voters agreed that the economic toll of the ordinance will extend far beyond the hospitality sector,” said AHLA President and CEO Rosanna Maietta. “Today’s decision denies Angelenos the opportunity to voice their opposition to this flawed proposal. It’s clear that the ordinance will jeopardize jobs, push hotels to the brink of closure, severely cut tax revenue the city desperately needs, and leave the city grossly unprepared for the 2028 Olympic Games. The mayor has made a clear commitment to broker a solution that averts these severe consequences. We call on her to proceed quickly.”