04-08-2025
Minimum Wage in L.A. Could Rise to $30 an Hour. Just Enough or Too Much?
Jeff Zarrinnam scanned the ground-floor cafe at the Hollywood Hotel and longed for its former bustle.
Tourists from around the world once packed the tables, sipping lattes and thumbing through brochures for celebrity-home bus tours. But one morning this summer, a lone couple vacationing from Tijuana, Mexico, sat in a corner, nursing coffees and scrolling their iPhones.
'We don't have the customers,' Mr. Zarrinnam said. 'It's becoming difficult to run this business.'
The Hollywood Hotel's troubles aren't unique. A report from the nonprofit Visit California, which tracks tourism in the state, forecast a decline in international tourism of around 9 percent in 2025, driven in part by negative sentiment toward the United States as a result of the Trump administration's trade policies. Los Angeles has seen a 5 percent decline in international air arrivals this year.
On top of it all, payroll for owners like Mr. Zarrinnam could go up more than 40 percent because the city passed a measure to increase wages for hotel and airport workers to $30 an hour over the next three years.
It would be among the highest minimum wages in the nation and apply to workers at hotels with at least 60 rooms.
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.