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Report: Construction Workers Frequently Denied Compensation Coverage (TN)

Labor brokers are putting workers at risk to avoid paying insurance premiums

By Alejandro Ramirez
Feb 12, 2020

A new report from the Tennessee Bureau of Workers’ Compensation Compliance Program highlights how construction companies and subcontractors are misclassifying workers to avoid paying workers’ compensation. The report details several other practices rampant in the construction industry that deny protections to workers and give noncompliant businesses a financial edge when it comes to securing contracts.

These practices put workers at risk. If workers are injured on the job, for instance, there’s a chance their employers won’t compensate them because they’re listed as independent contractors rather than as employees. Noncompliance also costs the state tax dollars, though the amount of dollars owed is difficult to pin down, especially when employers try to hide information from assessors.

“It’s sort of like an iceberg,” says Amanda Terry, the bureau’s director of compliance. “What we believe that we’re seeing is only 10 percent – the part that’s above the surface.”

The state collects 4.4 percent on workers’ compensation premiums, and the report says that in 2016, insurance carriers may have lost as much as $296 million.

The report says many employers also hire workers through subcontractors known as labor brokers, which frequently misclassify employees. Contractors hire these brokers, who in turn provide workers for a construction site. Many of these brokers have also been accused of wage theft and other compliance issues.

“We find that … when an employer is doing the wrong thing with their workers’ comp, they’re generally doing the wrong thing across the board,” says Terry.

These practices give labor brokers an unfair advantage. Victor White, director at Mid-South Carpenters Regional Council, a union representing carpenters, tells the Scene that a law-abiding contractor “walks in the door at a 20 percent disadvantage” compared to noncompliant businesses when it comes to bidding on contracts.

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Nashville is being built on a pyramid of payroll tax fraud | Opinion (TN)

According to some estimates, $2.6 billion in payroll tax fraud is lost annually, while Nashville construction projects add up to more than $2 billion.

Victor White, Guest columnist
Dec. 30, 2019

In November, a seldom-covered but far too common crime surfaced in Nashville’s news media: the case of wage theft at a Metro Nashville Public Schools-funded construction site.

A subcontractor working on the project allegedly refused to pay a local group of concrete workers, robbing them of $43,000 in wages for their work at a local school. These laborers have been calling attention to the theft for weeks and finally brought their case to MNPS at a school board meeting.

Members of the Southeastern Carpenters Regional Council were proud to stand with our brothers fighting for fair wages at the meeting, but the problems we face in the construction industry go well beyond one case of wage theft in Nashville.

Fraud is rampant across construction industry

The construction industry today is fundamentally built to allow rampant payroll tax fraud, wage theft, workers’ compensation premium fraud and worker misclassification. At each construction site a general contractor hires a subcontractor to manage different jobs: laying drywall, putting down concrete, or installing plumbing and lighting. Each of those subcontractors hires a labor broker to recruit a team of workers to get the job done. Each subcontractor competes for bids, promising they can get the job done for the least amount of money.

Many subcontractors recruit labor brokers they know will cut corners and trim costs. Sometimes, as in the case of the concrete workers, the subcontractor will fail to pay laborers and outright steal their wages. Other times subcontractors will classify workers as independent contractors, committing payroll tax fraud by avoiding paying taxes on their employees. These schemes cause law-abiding construction employers to suffer as they are underbid by rivals who keep costs down through breaking the law. …

Beyond the rampant fraud that is allowed to continue, the lack of oversight and regulation on construction sites in Nashville led to the largest rise in construction-related deaths over a 2-year period than any time in the last 30 years.

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Construction ‘Coyotes’ costing Utah taxpayers millions (UT)

NOVEMBER 18, 2019
BY ADAM HERBETS

SALT LAKE CITY – It’s an illegal business practice that most people in the construction industry consider an open secret: “coyotes” smuggling people into the workforce.

It’s a problem one state senator describes as a “robbery” of our tax dollars on some of the biggest construction sites across Utah.

FOX 13 News has discovered hundreds of employees are being paid in cash under the table on a weekly basis instead of paying taxes.

Patrick Bieker, the lead union representative with the Southwest Regional Council of Carpenters in Utah, has been fighting for stricter regulations against anyone who encourages employees to work for cash.

“We refer to them as ‘coyotes,’ or labor brokers,” Bieker said. “They typically use fear to keep their workforce in line.”

According to the Southwest Regional Council of Carpenters, the manpower on most job sites does not come from the general contractor – or even the subcontractors. Instead, they say it comes from coyotes who help the subcontractors limit the amount of fees they pay per employee.

“They don’t pay the workers comp, the unemployment insurance, state and federal taxes. You know, any of the burden that a responsible contractor pays,” Bieker said. “It’s just a constant race to the bottom. Let’s make sure everybody’s getting screwed!”

Workers turn on their coyote… and blame the subcontractors who led them there
Since he learned of the problem, Bieker has hired a number of anonymous informants who work on large job sites across the state. They take pictures of their payments every week, typically large sums of cash handed to them in an envelope inside small office buildings across Salt Lake City.

One of the workers told FOX 13 he has been a legal resident in the United States since 1999. He said he has a green card, but when he tried to get a job with a local subcontractor, the company told him to call a man named Sergio Coronado instead.

“The first payment, envelope, cash. It was like three months, two months and a half I think,” the worker said. “I wanted to pay my taxes, you know?”

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