2901 Grand River Ave
Detroit, MI 48201
(313) 309-4605
TV lounge is a place where everybody knows your name. It's been referenced time and time again as the "Cheers"of Detroit. The staff is renowned for their attentiveness, courtesy and skill behind the bar and on the floor. We offer a wide variety of mixed cocktails, beer & wine with an average price of $6. Music ranges from Techno & House to Hip Hop & R&B depending on the night. Our kitchen stays open late but is limited to a few items. Perfect for a quick bite or when you've had one too many. Weeknights offer a more intimate setting where as weekends typically provide a bustling club atmosphere. Age restrictions 21+
Give into temptation as a vivid light show of sensual images dance around you. Escape the boundaries of everyday life, where stunning servers present a kaleidoscope of cocktails and create the vibes for an exhilarating night out. And when it comes to planning an evening to remember, a bachelorette or birthday party, make you and your girlfriends the center of attention at the hottest party destination in the land. Tickets available at http://www.vnightclubtix.com/ Follow us on Instagram at http://instagram.com/vnightclubmgm Follow us on Twitter at https://twitter.com/vnightclubmgm
Designed with input from renowned automotive designer Chip Foose, MotorCity Casino Hotel is Detroit’s most innovative entertainment venue featuring the crown jewel of the city’s skyline. With world-class luxury hotel accommodations, spa facilities, fine dining, live performance venues, high-energy gaming and the city’s most exclusive ultra-lounge, you’ll find your kind of entertainment at the new MotorCity Casino Hotel. Our 67,000 square foot state-of-the-art meeting and conference facilities will take your meetings and social events to a whole new level. MotorCity Casino Hotel is Detroit’s only locally-owned and operated casino.
History Teamsters Local 214 was chartered by our International Union in 1966 for the specific purpose of representing the rights of our public employees and their families in the state of Michigan. Under the leadership and direction of Joseph Valenti, we have grown to be the largest Teamsters Local Union in the state of Michigan, now representing well over 9,000 members. Public Sector Organizing History It wasn’t until 1965 that the state of Michigan enacted the Public Employee Relations Act (P.E.R.A), which, for the first time, allowed public employees in our state to organize. Local 214 was chartered in 1966 as an exclusive “public sector” Teamster Local, and because of our involvement from the inception of the public sector law, became one of the pioneer public sector unions in the state. Very few other international unions were capable of or interested in representing public employees. It is only in recent years that traditional private sector international unions have become involved in the organization and representation of public employees to make up for their declining private sector membership and shrinking treasuries. In the 1960’s and early 1970’s it was not uncommon for many of the public sector bargaining units to go on strike even though prohibited by law. Many employers purposely provoked confrontations resulting in strikes, which they hoped would benefit them in their attempts to repeal P.E.R.A. Throughout the 1970’s and in the early part of the 1980’s, public employees throughout the country were viewed as second-class citizens. The wage and benefit levels of public employees were considerably below those of employees in comparable classifications in the private sector. The early 1980’s, however, brought about a shift in the economic structure of the middle class. Jobs traditionally held by what had become the “middle class American” in the private sector (i.e. factory workers and trades) began to erode. Automation, robotics, and the inception of the computer age resulted in the permanent loss of thousands of jobs. Private sector downsizing continues even today, and has been assisted by federal legislation encouraging big businesses to buy foreign products and utilize cheaper labor in third-world countries. Large international unions, once representing 38 percent of the private sector work force in this country, have shrunk to half their original size and now represent only 11 percent of these workers. During the same period of time, as workers moved from the private to the public sector, membership in the public sector increased dramatically. Initially, the first public sector employees to seek representation under P.E.R.A. were employees working in labor and trade classifications. As the work force shifted from private to public sector, membership expanded to include all aspects of the public sector work force. Today, as a result of organized labor, public sector employees are paid, in most cases, comparable to that of private sector employees performing the same duties, and, for the most part, enjoy a greater benefit package than their private sector counterparts. Because of collective bargaining rights in the public sector, job security has also increased ten-fold. Today, as current trends in economic and governmental strategy promote downsizing governmental services through privatization, public sector membership in unions is growing at a phenomenal pace. Professional and administrative employees, previously uninterested in labor unions, are now seeking professional representation.