Two months after a gunman killed four people at Rudin Management’s 345 Park Avenue, the City Council introduced a measure that would set minimum wages for security guards and increase training requirements. The Aland Etienne Safety and Security Act, named for one of the security guards killed in the building’s lobby, would set minimum hourly wages and benefits for non-government security guards. The wage floor would have to be at least as much as prevailing wages, which are union-level rates set annually. For unarmed guards in 2026, that rate ranges from $18.02 per hour (plus benefits) to $21.20 (depending on […]
This article originally appeared on The Real Deal. Click here to read the full story.