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Union volunteers help enforce laws against construction wage theft on Multnomah County projects (OR)

Feb 18, 2020
By Don McIntosh

In the fight against wage theft, the volunteer cavalry has begun to arrive. On Jan. 21, the Multnomah County Commission heard a first report back about a pilot program in which union and community volunteers help County officials police construction work sites to make sure public works contractors are obeying labor laws, such as paying prevailing wage and overtime, not exceeding the mandated apprentice-to-journeyman ratio, and not misclassifying construction workers into lower-paid job classifications.

There are 13 volunteers so far, mostly business representatives from local building trades unions. … Volunteers also get ID badges authorizing them to visit construction work sites, where they speak with workers about conditions-to make sure they match up with what their employers are reporting. Any violations are reported to the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries for enforcement.

“Access to the workers is the biggest thing,” said Sheet Metal Workers Local 16 organizer Brian Noble. “They usually don’t know that the company could be stealing money from them. By talking to them, we can find out.”

The first batch of volunteers was trained last August. So far the program includes volunteers from the Sheet Metal, Painters, Carpenters, Operators, Ironworkers, Glaziers, and Bricklayers unions. The software launched Oct. 1. Site visits began later that month. The program is modeled on a similar program used by the Los Angeles Unified School District. …

County commissioners last May approved temporary funding for the pilot program. After hearing the Jan. 21 progress report, commissioners voiced support for making the program ongoing when County Chair Deb Kafoury submits her next proposed budget in April. …

Commissioner Lori Stegman said she’d like to see the program go statewide.
“The term ‘wage theft’ doesn’t really cover it. This is exploitation,” added Commissioner Susheela Jayapal.

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Philadelphia City Council votes to make the Department of Labor permanent, expand its powers (PA)

The independent department will provide much-needed oversight for the new slate of labor laws enacted in the last couple years

By Nigel Thompson
February 14, 2020

On Feb. 13, Philadelphia City Council unanimously passed new legislation to change the city charter and create a permanent Department of Labor within city government to help enforce some of the previously mentioned legislation.

The bill was introduced by councilmembers Helen Gym and Bobby Henon, and co-sponsored by councilmembers Kendra Brooks, Isaiah Thomas, Cindy Bass and Kenyatta Johnson.

“We intend to be a city that really, truly upholds the rights of all people,” said Gym before moving to adopt the bill.

In addition to enforcement, the permanent Department of Labor within city government will also be charged with investigating complaints, and educating workers about their rights and employers of their responsibilities to employees.

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OAG Brings Criminal Charges Against Company, Owner for Wage Violations (PA)

By Christopher D. Carusone, Steven M. Williams and
Carl L. Engel | January 14, 2020 at 12:50 PM

Employers in Pennsylvania should stay on their toes as the Pennsylvania attorney general (AG) announced charges against a major mechanical contractor engaged in numerous public works projects for crimes arising from a prevailing wage dispute. This marks the first time that the attorney general has brought criminal charges for prevailing wage violations, which was previously enforced only through civil actions. …

Although the new crime called “prevailing wage theft” has not been created in Pennsylvania, the attorney general charges that Good and Goodco violated existing criminal statutes prohibiting deceptive or fraudulent business practices, theft by unlawful taking, theft by deception and other related crimes. While the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) historically has enforced prevailing wage laws through civil action, the charges against Goodco mark the first time that the OAG has sought to enforce them with criminal penalties. Cases of this nature are being prioritized by the OAG’s recently formed fair labor section. When Shapiro ran for AG in 2016, he pledged to create a unit that would “enforce Pennsylvania’s labor laws in partnership with the Department of Labor & Industry and the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission,” among other pro-worker actions. Accordingly, the fair labor section has made a mission of fighting wage theft, tip stealing, worker misclassification and workplace discrimination.

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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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Is Your Employer Stealing From You?

Millions of workers lose billions in stolen wages every year-nearly as much as all other property theft.

By Michael Hill, Correspondent
November 8, 2019, 3PM EST

Since assuming office in Philadelphia last year, Larry Krasner has earned a national reputation as a radical new kind of district attorney. He’s pushed the sort of criminal justice reform that typically comes from activists or public defenders, like ordering prosecutors to stop pursuing criminal charges for marijuana possession, or directing them to no longer seek cash bail for low-level offenses. Last October, he took another bold step: He created a task force focused on crimes against workers.

One of the primary crimes this task force will focus on is wage theft. At the absolute simplest, wage theft is as it sounds-a worker doesn’t get fully paid for the work they’ve done. Often employers pull this off by paying for less than the number of hours worked, not paying for legally required overtime, or stealing tips. That’s money that workers are legally entitled to and that their bosses find some way of pocketing.

Wage theft isn’t one of the crimes most prosecutors and politicians refer to when they talk about getting “tough on crime,” but it represents a massive chunk of all theft committed in the U.S. A 2017 study by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) found that in the ten most populous states, an estimated 2.4 million people lose a combined $8 billion in income every year to theft by their employers. That’s nearly half as much as all other property theft combined last year-$16.4 billion according to the FBI. And again, EPI’s findings are only for ten states. According to the institute, the typical worker victimized by minimum-wage violations is underpaid by $64 per week, totaling $3,300 per year. If its figures are representative of a national phenomenon, then EPI estimates that the yearly total for American wage theft is closer to $15 billion.

There are some overt ways that employers rob their workers, like taking money directly out of their paychecks, but wage theft can take more complicated and subtler forms. Deliberately mislabeling workers as independent contractors in order to avoid paying higher wages for the same responsibilities as regular employees, for example, or asking employees to work while off the clock, or denying meal breaks, all technically fall under wage theft. Amazon, for instance, is currently being sued for not paying its employees for the amount of time they spend going through lengthy security checkpoints when they arrive at and leave work. It’s hard to mount civil lawsuits against employers who violate minimum-wage laws, because typically the victims of these crimes don’t have the time or resources to fight for their lost wages. And last year’s Supreme Court decision in Epic Systems Corp. v. Lewis, which ruled that it’s legal to require employees to sign away their rights to join class-action lawsuits, makes going after employers for wage theft much more difficult.

As author Kim Bobo explains in her book Wage Theft in America, the people affected by wage theft are spread across a wide variety of industries, working in construction, nursing homes, garment factories, farms, poultry-processing plants, restaurants, landscaping, and more. But more professional workers are at risk, too, like nurses, pharmaceutical sales reps, and financial advisers. Freelancers are also especially susceptible. A 2018 report by Good Jobs First found that the overwhelming majority of companies caught committing wage theft are “the giant companies included in the Fortune 500, the Fortune Global 500 and the Forbes list of the largest privately held firms.” That includes Walmart, FedEx, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, and State Farm Insurance.

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State agencies help workers fight wage theft, know their rights (NJ)

By Michael Hill, Correspondent
November 8, 2019, 3PM EST

For many New Jersey workers, wage theft, discrimination, sexual misconduct and more are all-too-common workplace realities. That’s why the Department of Community Affairs and the Attorney General’s office are equipping workers with knowledge of their rights through a series of wage theft clinics across the state.

The target audience of one clinic in Atlantic City was immigrant communities, who are especially fearful about “… coming forward to the department to express their rights,” according to NJ Department of Labor & Workforce Development Commissioner Robert Asaro-Angelo, who spoke to attendees in Spanish.

The Hispanic Association of Atlantic County encouraged the state to hold the clinic, and it reached out to Latinx workers, but only a handful came.

“Obviously, to come out to settings like this, maybe the fear is too great for them to come out,” said Bert Lopez, the association’s president.

Those that did come got a step-by-step lesson in filing a complaint with the state department and some advice about proving wage theft.

(See Article)

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Nashville schools to enact stricter rules after wage theft allegations against subcontractor (TN)

Published 6:51 p.m. CT
Dec. 10, 2019

Nashville public schools will require thorough documentation of work done on its construction projects after a group of concrete workers recently alleged wage theft against a district subcontractor.

“Going forward, the facilities and construction department will require contractors and all subcontractors have written contracts for work being performed,” said Metro Nashville Public Schools Interim Superintendent Adrienne Battle during a Tuesday night board meeting. “That way, if there is a wage theft claim or payment dispute in the future, there will be more documentation to help get to the bottom of the situation.”

The change comes after allegations that Nashville’s Orion Building Company subcontracted with Joe Haas Construction, which in turn hired the concrete company – RSA Concrete – for cement work at McMurray Middle School.
Workers said the concrete company was never paid $43,000 for work by the subcontractor and are alleging wage theft.

A similar incident occurred during work on a Vanderbilt University building, the group said, and the school placed pressure on the contractor to ensure payment.

Nashville schools has paid its contractual obligations to Orion and district staff have facilitated a meeting to resolve the issue. Battle said another meeting is forthcoming.

“Normally, contractual disputes like this will be settled by mediators or courts, but we are trying to facilitate a productive path forward towards a quick resolution,” Battle said.

Last month, Workers’ Dignity asked the district to ensure contractors require bonds to ensure payment for work at a site. Nashville public schools, Battle said, already requires bonds that ensure payment for work being performed.

The change will require more overall documentation. Workers’ Dignity Interim Co-Director Jack Willey said to the board that he wants the documentation process to be as simple as possible to ensure its effectiveness for all workers.

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AG Nessel Joins Effort Urging Regulators To Protect Workers From Harmful Anticompetitive Labor Practices

July 18, 2019 at 10:20 am

LANSING, Mich. – Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel joined 17 other Attorneys General earlier this week in urging collaboration between Federal Trade Commission (FTC) regulators and state attorneys general to protect workers from anticompetitive labor practices that depress wages and limit job mobility and opportunities for advancement.

In a comment letter filed in connection with the FTC’s hearings on competition in the 21st Century, the coalition argues that the FTC should increase its focus on antitrust enforcement in labor markets and use their authority to crack down on non-compete and no-poach contract agreements-in addition to considering how workers are impacted by proposed mergers.

“In an era where wages continually decline and workers’ protections, like prevailing wage, are routinely stripped, we must begin reviving antitrust regulation in labor markets,” said Nessel. “We must do this to protect workers from harmful anticompetitive practices such as targeting low-income workers by forcing them to sign non-compete agreements and ultimately limiting their earning potential.”

(Read More)

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Iron Workers Union announces $300,000 Wage Theft Settlement for Millennium Reinforcing Workers (CA)

NEWS PROVIDED BY
Ironworkers California & Vicinity District Council
Oct 21, 2019, 13:12 ET

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 21, 2019 /PRNewswire/ — Millennium Reinforcing Inc. (MRI) has settled a $300,000 class action lawsuit filed by employees of the company with the assistance of the Ironworkers California & Vicinity District Council. All Class Members are current or former hourly non-exempt iron workers employees of MRI who were victims of wage-theft by the company. As of September 23rd, 2019, 73 Class Members for the Perez v. Millennium Reinforcing Settlement case-including the class representatives Angel Leon and Alfredo Perez will receive checks from the settlement.

The Ironworkers Union has been assisting workers at Millennium Reinforcing, a California concrete reinforcing contractor, to improve working conditions at the company. During their struggle, workers stated they were subjected to a number of unjust conditions. Faced with wage violations, poor safety and working conditions, Millennium workers felt their only option was to fight for changes at the company.

Ironworker California & Vicinity District Council President and General Vice President Don Zampa said, “The Ironworkers Union has a long history of helping to improve conditions for all workers in our industry, regardless of race, creed, color, gender, national origin or Union affiliation. We have proudly stood beside the Millennium workers in their struggle for better treatment, pay, safety and working conditions from their employer. We are very satisfied with the outcome of the Settlement and happy our collective efforts have benefited workers for Millennium and their families. We will continue to provide assistance for MRI workers on issues they may bring to us in the future as well.”

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Crackdown on labor crimes in region intensifies (CA)

By Heather Yakin
Posted Oct 17, 2019 at 6:22 PMUpdated Oct 17, 2019 at 7:55 PM

NEWBURGH – The battle against wage theft and other labor-related crimes is going regional, prosecutors and labor leaders said Thursday at Montefiore St. Luke’s Cornwall Hospital in Newburgh.

Orange County District Attorney David Hoovler ticked off some of the categories: prevailing wage fraud, failure to provide insurance or worker’s compensation, misclassifying workers in order to underpay them. Unscrupulous contractors who use those tactics can underbid ethical companies, putting the ethical people at a disadvantage, Hoovler said.

So when public works projects are put out to bid, he said, “I feel it’s my job to make sure local contractors, local bidders and local workers get a fair shake,” and to make sure workers get the right compensation and the employers pay their fair share of taxes.

According to the New York State Labor Department, in 2018 more than $35.3 million in fraudulently obtained money was returned to about 35,000 workers who had been the victims of wage theft or public work violations.

An undocumented worker who gets paid the wrong amount can’t seek help, said Alan Seidman, executive director of the Construction Contractors Association. And when an employer skimps on or skips insurance or worker’s compensation and an uninsured worker gets hurt on the job, taxpayers foot the medical bills.

Seidman talked about a case from about three years ago, on a project in the Town of Montgomery where an out-of-state contractor won the bid.

“A non-union ironworker from out of state, making probably $14 or $15 per hour, fell and ended up with a broken bone in his back,” Seidman said. “No one knew until he was wheeled in (to the hospital) that he had no insurance.”

The contractor fired the worker the same morning.

Hoovler said his goal is not necessarily to prosecute the offenders, some of whom aren’t aware of New York’s Labor Law requirements.

“We try to educate first, prosecute second, and ultimately get compliance,” he said. Wage theft, however, is a zero-tolerance matter.

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