Nyreshia Davis and Lindsey Lundgren are hospitable warriors in the pandemic-reeling hospitality industry.
Davis, head of housekeeping, and Lundgren, a front-office manager, volunteered for a skeleton crew of 16 workers to keep the InterContinental Hotel open at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport.
The hotel furloughed 113 workers following the plunge in air travel as the coronavirus spread around the country. The hotel's occupancy dropped to around 10%.
"Nobody does what they do as well as they do," said Serah Morrissey, human resources director for Graves Hospitality, the Minneapolis-based co-owner of the hotel. "They are selfless."
The guests are airline crews, traveling health care workers, first responders and mourners visiting families.
"I see you bite your tongue when barked at by people who are tired," Morrissey wrote gratefully to front-line workers recently. "I see you walk into dirty guest rooms, knowing the most meaningful thing you can do for others is clean and sanitize … as grueling as the work may be. Behind your masks and gloves. I know you are scared sometimes.
"I see you holding gloved hands with a guest who couldn't be with an elderly parent dying of the virus."
David and Lundgren didn't have to work. They could have taken unemployment compensation and made another $600 each week in federal stimulus funds for up to 12 weeks; more than their pay. Graves Hospitality quickly made up the difference.