UNITE HERE Local 11, the hospitality union for southern California, rallied at FIFA's downtown Los Angeles host-committee offices on Wednesday 27 May and filed a formal complaint with the California Privacy Protection Agency and the state attorney general 1. the Union alleges FIFA's worker-accreditation system compels staff to hand over a social security number, home address, nationality and country of birth, and to waive their rights under the CCPA (the California Consumer Privacy Act, the state's data-protection law), with that data then passed to the Department of Homeland Security and ICE, the federal immigration enforcement agency 2. Gubernatorial candidate Tom Steyer joined the campaign.
The dispute began as a labour matter. Local 11 filed a charge with the NLRB, the National Labor Relations Board, naming FIFA as co-respondent on Friday 8 May , then held a rally on 19 May demanding immigration agents be barred from SoFi Stadium . The 27 May filing changes the legal terrain entirely: it leaves labour law for data-privacy law, a different statute and a different regulator, and it targets not who may enter the stadium but who may read the workforce's files.
That distinction has an operational edge. The accreditation contractor, not FIFA's security operation, holds the worker data, which is why the complaint names a privacy regulator rather than the labour board. If the agency finds the data-sharing unlawful, FIFA's vetting workflow is exposed to a state injunction weeks before SoFi hosts the opener on Friday 12 June.
