One Year After Pledge, More Than 5,000 Hotel Properties Have Deployed Safety Devices For Employees

One Year After Pledge, More Than 5,000 Hotel Properties Have Deployed Safety Devices For Employees

Large hotel chains adopted new measures to combat sexual harassment and increase safety for workers in the wake of the #MeToo movement.

One year after the hotel industry announced a pledge to increase security for its employees and protect against sexual harassment, more than 5,000 properties have deployed safety devices this year with another 15,000 properties planning to do the same in 2020. 

In 2018, executives from Marriott, Hyatt, Hilton, IHG and Wyndham announced that their companies would adopt the 5-Star Promise, a series of actions aimed at decreasing sexual harassment of employees by colleagues or guests. While 17 companies originally signed on to the pledge, a total of 56 have now said they will work to adopt the policies, according to the American Hotel and Lodging Association

“I’m proud of the progress we have made as an industry over the past year, and we will continue our efforts to ensure America’s hotels are safe places for all those who work in and visit them,” Chip Rogers, the president and CEO of AHLA, said in a statement. 

Those five actions included developing industry-wide training materials on safety, security and sexual harassment; implementing mandatory anti-harassment policies available in multiple languages; providing ongoing training on sexual harassment; broadening partnerships with organizations that fight human trafficking and sexual violence; and providing employees with safety devices to help them feel secure while on the job. 

That last promise was the focus of the AHLA’s announcement on Monday. Labor union leaders have been calling for the distribution of safety devices for years, but also told The Los Angeles Times that they were concerned about which products the hotel chains were distributing. Some may offer electronic panic buttons that employees could call for help regardless of their location, and others might be distributing devices that make loud noises, including whistles. 

“It’s a step in the right direction but it’s no guarantee to bring help unless it’s a real panic system,” said Kurt Petersen, a spokesman for Unite Here Local 11, a union representing 30,000 workers in hotels, airports, restaurants and more in California and Arizona. 

In the AHLA’s announcement, the organization said that participating properties are determining the best security devices according to their specific circumstances. Some of the options range from devices with loud noise emitting features to emergency GPS trackers, according to the statement. 

“This approach reflects the segmented and diverse nature of the hotel industry as well as the considerable structural differences in building design and layout, construction materials and WiFi network capabilities within the industry,” the statement reads. 

Rosanna Maietta, a spokesperson for the AHLA, told the Times that she does not know a hotel company that is only giving employees whistles to address the harassment issue. 

“Every solution will differ per property based on the needs of the employees and the type of hotel, so a hotel on the side of a highway will have a different solution than a high-rise in Manhattan,” Maietta said. 

Panic buttons are required in some parts of the country, including Washington, D.C., Seattle, New York and Chicago. Other cities in California are considering the initiative, and Long Beach approved the measure in November 2018. 

About the Author

Haley Samsel is an Associate Content Editor for the Infrastructure Solutions Group at 1105 Media.

Featured

  • Report: 47 Percent of Security Service Providers Are Not Yet Using AI or Automation Tools

    Trackforce, a provider of security workforce management platforms, today announced the launch of its 2025 Physical Security Operations Benchmark Report, an industry-first study that benchmarks both private security service providers and corporate security teams side by side. Based on a survey of over 300 security professionals across the globe, the report provides a comprehensive look at the state of physical security operations. Read Now

    • Guard Services
  • Identity Governance at the Crossroads of Complexity and Scale

    Modern enterprises are grappling with an increasing number of identities, both human and machine, across an ever-growing number of systems. They must also deal with increased operational demands, including faster onboarding, more scalable models, and tighter security enforcement. Navigating these ever-growing challenges with speed and accuracy requires a new approach to identity governance that is built for the future enterprise. Read Now

  • Eagle Eye Networks Launches AI Camera Gun Detection

    Eagle Eye Networks, a provider of cloud video surveillance, recently introduced Eagle Eye Gun Detection, a new layer of protection for schools and businesses that works with existing security cameras and infrastructure. Eagle Eye Networks is the first to build gun detection into its platform. Read Now

  • Report: AI is Supercharging Old-School Cybercriminal Tactics

    AI isn’t just transforming how we work. It’s reshaping how cybercriminals attack, with threat actors exploiting AI to mass produce malicious code loaders, steal browser credentials and accelerate cloud attacks, according to a new report from Elastic. Read Now

  • Pragmatism, Productivity, and the Push for Accountability in 2025-2026

    Every year, the security industry debates whether artificial intelligence is a disruption, an enabler, or a distraction. By 2025, that conversation matured, where AI became a working dimension in physical identity and access management (PIAM) programs. Observations from 2025 highlight this turning point in AI’s role in access control and define how security leaders are being distinguished based on how they apply it. Read Now

New Products

  • EasyGate SPT and SPD

    EasyGate SPT SPD

    Security solutions do not have to be ordinary, let alone unattractive. Having renewed their best-selling speed gates, Cominfo has once again demonstrated their Art of Security philosophy in practice — and confirmed their position as an industry-leading manufacturers of premium speed gates and turnstiles.

  • Compact IP Video Intercom

    Viking’s X-205 Series of intercoms provide HD IP video and two-way voice communication - all wrapped up in an attractive compact chassis.

  • Connect ONE’s powerful cloud-hosted management platform provides the means to tailor lockdowns and emergency mass notifications throughout a facility – while simultaneously alerting occupants to hazards or next steps, like evacuation.

    Connect ONE®

    Connect ONE’s powerful cloud-hosted management platform provides the means to tailor lockdowns and emergency mass notifications throughout a facility – while simultaneously alerting occupants to hazards or next steps, like evacuation.