LI firm pays $1.45M in prevailing wage settlement

By: David Winzelberg
April 6, 2022

The New York State Department of Labor has reached a $1.45 million settlement with a Long Island contractor for failing to pay prevailing wage for a public works project.

The agreement with Calverton-based Miller Environmental Group stemmed from the company’s contract with PSEG Long Island to address oil spills and soil contamination, conduct clean-up, and perform other work supporting utility installation, according to a DOL statement.

Investigators confirmed that Miller Environmental failed to bid the contract at prevailing wage rates and that PSEG Long Island failed to inform Miller Environmental that this contract involved public work. After discussions on the matter, Miller Environmental agreed to pay 88 employees the full underpayment amount, making those payments in January and February.

Contractors and subcontractors must pay the prevailing rate of wage and supplements to all workers under a public works contract based on the locality where the work is performed, according to state law. Third parties contracted on behalf and for the benefit of a public entity are also subject to the prevailing wage requirements. Because PSEG Long Island operates Long Island Power Authority’s electrical transmission and distribution infrastructure, its contracts are subject to those requirements.

“In New York State, we believe workers deserve a fair wage for a fair day’s work,” DOL Commissioner Roberta Reardon said in the statement. “Protecting workers is a top priority to the New York State Department of Labor. We remain vigilant to ensure that employers are properly compensating employees for the work that they do. We will never stop protecting the paychecks of hard-working New Yorkers.”

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