UNITE HERE Local 11, the southern California hospitality workers' union, and stadium operator Legends Global are scheduled to resume contract bargaining on Monday 8 June after Local 11 members voted 96 percent for strike authorisation 1. Running alongside the labour dispute is a separate complaint under the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), which Local 11 filed over FIFA's sharing of worker accreditation data .
SoFi Stadium in Inglewood hosts eight World Cup matches, including the venue's opener on Friday 12 June. A walkout by the roughly 2,000 cooks, servers and stand attendants Local 11 represents there would be the most visible labour action at any tournament venue. The union's chosen demand is what makes the dispute distinctive: it has pressed for a commitment that federal immigration enforcement will not take part in tournament operations, framing the fight around its largely immigrant workforce rather than wages or hours.
FIFA controls venue-access authority and the accreditation data at the centre of the CCPA filing, yet it has not replied to Local 11 since 8 May. That silence is the structural fault line: the union can bargain with Legends Global over pay and conditions, but the two demands that drew the strike mandate, ICE exclusion and data handling, sit with a governing body that is not at the table.
