Tom Dundon, who acquired the Portland Trail Blazers for more than $2 billion in a transaction that closed last month, is replacing in-house concessions staff at the Moda Center with contracted vendors. The move affects approximately 150 union workers represented by Unite Here Local 9, according to people familiar with the transition.
The Blazers notified concessions employees on Thursday that their positions would be eliminated following the season's final home game. Food service will shift to a third-party operator—likely Levy or Delaware North, based on vendor partnerships at Dundon's other properties. The union contract, negotiated under previous owner Jody Allen, included healthcare and pension contributions that third-party models typically exclude. Dundon's Carolina Hurricanes switched to Levy in 2019, three years after he purchased the NHL franchise for $420 million.
The calculus is blunt. In-house concessions operations at NBA arenas carry labor costs of roughly $8-12 million annually when factoring benefits, scheduling inefficiencies, and union grievance overhead. Outsourcing converts that fixed expense into a revenue-share agreement—arena operators typically retain 45-50% of gross concessions, while the vendor absorbs labor volatility. For a franchise Dundon financed partially through leveraged debt, trimming $5-7 million in annual run-rate costs creates immediate EBITDA improvement that debt covenants notice.
The timing matters. Dundon's purchase—the second-largest NBA transaction after Mat Ishbia's $4 billion Phoenix Suns deal—came with reported seller financing from the Allen estate. Cleaning up the operating margin before Year 1 audited financials gives him leverage in refinancing conversations and shows institutional limited partners in his investment vehicle that he's running the asset like the rest of his portfolio. His Hurricanes rank among the NHL's most profitable teams on a percentage basis, largely due to aggressive cost management in non-hockey operations.
Portland's concessions staff learned of the change through a building-wide memo, not individual meetings—a detail that reached city council members within hours. Mayor Keith Wilson's office issued a statement expressing concern about "the treatment of long-tenured employees," which translates to: we're watching whether this becomes a public fight during Rose Quarter renovation talks. The city holds a ground lease on the land under the Moda Center, and that lease comes up for renegotiation in 2027. Dundon needs Portland's cooperation for any arena district development, which makes the union's next move—file a grievance quietly or hold a press conference—worth monitoring.
Unite Here Local 9 represents workers at the Oregon Convention Center and several downtown hotels. The local has staging capacity for public pressure campaigns, but Dundon's posture with the Hurricanes suggests he'll wait them out. When Raleigh arena workers pushed for higher wages in 2021, he let the news cycle pass and signed the vendor contract anyway. The Carolina approach: take the short-term headline hit, improve the operating statement, move on.
What to watch: whether Delaware North or Levy announces the Portland contract in the next two weeks, which would confirm Dundon's timeline. Also track whether any front-office positions in ticketing or marketing turn over—concessions is visible, but back-office consolidation with Dundon's Hurricanes shared-services platform (finance, IT, HR) would signal a deeper integration. The Blazers' regional sports network deal with Root Sports expires after next season, and Dundon's cost discipline positions him to either renegotiate hard or launch a direct-to-consumer stream with lower production overhead.
The union's bargaining position weakens daily. Dundon controls the asset, the lease structure gives him flexibility, and the NBA's labor peace means the league office won't intervene in a local hiring dispute. The severance terms—reportedly two weeks per year of service—are exactly what the old contract required and nothing more.