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The Crime Wave No One Talks About - Theft of Wages in the Workplace

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The good news is that over thirty states and the federal government raised the minimum wage in recent years. The bad news is that many employers, even most employers in some industries, ignore existing wage and workplace regulations, so the real challenge now is to stop the systematic violation of these laws.

As one more reminder of this enforcement problem, just last week the Brennan Center for Justice released "Unregulated Work in the Global City," a three-year study of broken labor laws across industries ranging from supermarkets to domestic work to home health care to taxis to manufacturing. The Brennan Center study, focused on New York City, reflects trends highlighted in other industry studies, including a U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) study of the nursing industry which found in 2000 that 60% of nursing homes routinely violated overtime, minimum wage, or child labor laws, and a 2004 DOL study of the garment industry which found that 54% of contractors in Los Angeles violated the minimum wage law.

As the Brennan Center highlights and as Progress States detailed in a Stateside Dispatch last year, states can take action to end this systematic illegal employer behavior, but the first step is to take this epidemic of criminal activity by employers as seriously as we do other crimes, most of which are less pervasive.

Systematic Workplace Wage Violations

Our lives are surrounded by work conducted under illegal conditions, from grocery stores paying less than minimum wage to dry cleaners violating health and safety regulations to restaurants that ignore overtime laws as workers are subjected to 70-hour work weeks.

What is most shocking from the Brennan Center report is the consensus from not only workers and regulators but the employers themselves that lawlessness is the norm in so many economic sectors. Some interview responses from the report:

  • Restaurants: “At plenty of places there is no such thing as overtime,” explained a restaurant employer.
  • Retail Workers: “They work for 10 hours, they get 35 dollars, no lunch breaks, no overtime. The question of it never arises. The moment they talk about it they get fired,” explained one community group about women retail workers in the organization.
  • Day Laborers: “Some of the guys going three months are not getting paid. There tends to be a promise that eventually they will get paid. So they continue to work for free. The thing is the promise is never kept," said a lawyer who works with day laborers.
  • Garment Industry: “You see people just die of exhaustion on the machines” reports a staff member of a local community group.
  • Commercial Laundries: "There’s an industry-wide problem about failure to pay the minimum wage," said a staff member of a regulatory agency, "and these workers are almost never paid time and a half. When we ask owners why they’re paying so little, they say, 'That’s what everybody else pays.'"

This pervasive illegal employer behavior has arisen in the context of three decades of economic restructuring of the American labor market to which regulators and legislators have increasingly failed to respond. Bottom-feeding companies have been allowed to dominate whole industries at the expense of law-abiding companies that would pay a decent wage if they were not undermined by illegal competition.

How States Are Enforcing Wage Laws

To respond to these problems, our Stateside Dispatch last year, Cracking Down on Wage Law Violators, outlined a broad menu of options for states in toughening enforcement. A number of states are making progress in implementing some improved enforcement strategies.

More Resources for Enforcement: Most state enforcement divisions are woefully underfunded, but some states are taking new actions to better fund wage enforcement. One of the most obvious places for states to beef up enforcement is making sure public money doesn't fund lawbreakers. Ohio's Attorney General has announced a program to crack down on government contractors violating the state's prevailing wage law. Richard J. Hobbs, executive vice-president of the Association of General Contractors, a construction trade group, applauded the plan since it "keeps your low-rate, less of a quality firm from coming in and underbidding" legitimate honest firms.

As we highlighted a couple of weeks ago, a number of states are putting additional funds into independent legal services agencies, which can assist low-income workers in bringing civil cases when their employment rights are violated.

Ending Misclassification of Independent Contractors: States are also increasingly targeting the employer tactic of misclassifying employees as "independent contractors," which excludes workers from minimum wage, prevailing wage, overtime, health and safety, and right to organize protections.

A February report by Cornell University researchers estimated, for example, that 704,000 of the seven million private-sector workers in New York state were misclassified as independent contractors, costing the state $175 million in unemployment insurance taxes each year and undermining those workers' rights. In response, recently elected Gov. Elliot Spitzer has vowed to revitalize the state labor department to fight misclassification of workers. And Colorado this year enacted a law requiring construction sites to make sure all workers, whether officially employees or "independent contractors," are covered by workers' comp insurance.

Strengthening Freedom to Form Unions: One clear finding of the Brennan report was that unionized employers obeyed employment laws at a far higher rate than their non-union counterparts, since unions act as on-the-ground enforcers of employment law.

State legislative chambers across the country have approved resolutions calling for federal labor law reform, but states are also taking action to support worker freedom to form unions in other areas where they have legislative authority. New York, Oregon, Illinois and Washington State have all in the last two years granted new rights to child care workers to organize unions. Just this session, New Hampshire and Oregon legislatures have approved bills giving employees the right not to attend employer-sponsored meetings on politics or religion that are unrelated to job duties.

Not Enough: Still, given the millions of workers suffering from illegal work conditions, states need to take far greater action and devote far more resources to the problem.

Wage Enforcement and the Immigration Debate

Unfortunately, as I've mentioned here before, while we see many advocates of "fighting illegal immigration" claim to be doing so in the name of helping low-income workers, it is remarkable that almost none of them are addressing the pervasive theft of low-income worker wages by employers violating of wage laws. Although only a minority of those working under illegal work conditions are undocumented immigrants, our nation's systematic lack of enforcement of wage laws has contributed to the dysfunction of our immigration system, while the denial of employment rights to such immigrants has only further undermined wage law enforcement.

In fact, cracking down on sweatshops and wage violators would probably be the most effective deterrent to employers recruiting undocumented immigrants, a point the Drum Major Institute makes in its "Principles for an Immigration Policy to Strengthen and Expand the American Middle Class." If all employers have to pay a decent wage, the attraction of hiring undocumented immigrants would diminish tremendously.

As the Brennan Center report argues:

The best inoculation against workplace violations is workers who know their rights, have full status under the law to assert them, have access to sufficient legal resources, and do not fear exposure or retaliation when bringing claims against their employers.

Along this line, states like California and New York have established clearly that their laws fully protect undocumented immigrants against retaliation when they bring wage claims against employers. In the words of New York's highest court, this is necessary since weak employment rights for undocumented workers makes "it more financially attractive to hire undocumented aliens [and] would actually increase employment levels of undocumented aliens, not decrease it."

Unfortunately, too many other states are going in the opposite direction. A number of states have focused on punitive measures against immigrant workers themselves, which only drives immigrant workers underground, feeding the expansion of sweatshops as employers know that their undocumented employees won't dare report wage violations to the authorities. Even when states target illegal behavior by employers, they tend to narrowly focus on their hiring of undocumented workers while failing to increase penalties for violating wage laws. Arizona, for example just approved tough punishments on employers hiring undocumented workers, yet its legislature has resisted any strengthening of state wage laws.

Conclusion: Our states face a crime wave involving millions of victims of wage theft each year, yet the response is completely inadequate to dealing with pervasive employer violations of wage and other workplace laws. Politically, we see rightwing anti-immigrant campaigns diverting attention away from those wage violations.

However, we are beginning to see greater attention to these wage law violations -- the Brennan Center report being one example -- and states are beginning to enact new measures to rein in employer violations of wage laws. A lot more needs to happen but it's a start.


8 Comments

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Businesses have been given free reign to abuse employees.
Part of the problem with the current immigration bill is that it could have an effect impacting the income of the "unskilled" workforce.
As Bernie Saunder notes if Americans "won't do" low-skilled/low pay jobs and high-tech/high pay jobs are being outsourced, what jobs can Americans perform?
Low-skilled workers can feel obligated to submit to unfair work rules because they can be replaced by someone willing to work for the same or lower wages.
Ensuring adherence to workplace rules by employers in paying a liveable wage for work performed, and hiring and paying an honest wage to legally employed immigrants is one of the first step in solving employment abuses.

There is an excellent article on this topic at DailyKos today

The Progressive Case Against the Immigration Bill
by Trapper John
Mon Jun 25, 2007 at 04:32:29 AM PDT

A CPA who does taxes told me recently that reclassifying employees (in the exampled case telemarketers) as independent contractors leads to personal financial problems. Employers give them a gross-pay check without telling them of quarterly reporting and payment requirements (for independent contractors) thus bringing them extensive fines and penalties from the IRS at what the employee believes is the correct filing time, April 15th. The IRS also arbitrarily classifies the person in some nether-region category between employee and contractor, and so on while the employer laughs all the way to the bank.

Tilting the law back towards helping unions insead of hindering them would solve most of these problems very quickly. The aversion most Americans have towards unions is so irrational that it is easy for businessmen to play on it and legislatures use it to generate voting support. I wonder if that aversion isn't intentionally fed by the businessmen who operate the news media.

Hoppy in Sacramento

Another layer of this, although not nearly as serious as what you outline in the article, is that workers on salary are generally considered wholly owned by their employer as well. Employers can mandate that you work all night, all weekend, anytime, as many hours as they like.

Often you "ask" for time that should should be able to control as "afterwork time".
You basically dont have any time that you wholly control.

While its great to have a salary, being expected to work as much as an employer wants you to has always seemed somehow unreasonble to me, and the only recourse you really have is to quit and find another job. I wish there was at least an agreed upon standard for what a salaried worker was expected to work.

Am I a whiner? you know, I certainly feel like it writing this, but it does seems like there should be a better standard practice than the way things work now.

I’m getting a kick out of this article because I’m NOT an economist.

I can sort of see how a myopic economist may be able to see an increase in profits by snuffing the descendants of the founders of this country. That makes room for the criminals in business’s illegal labor. Not only can many of the illegal invaders be paid off in token wages but that also leaves the honest workers stiffed with the criminal’s taxes, medical and social services. It’s a pure genius way of eliminating any competition. They won’t be able to compete on that playing field. Every day more and more will go under.

The part that confuses me is I can see examples of some of the illegal aliens previous work. And… How will all of the crime that surrounds illegal immigration be helping you out when the honest people are forced to join in, in the lawlessness?

I consider it up to the citizens to end this abuse. How? If you hear or see a report of a company that does not pay workers the minimum wage, then organize a boycott of the company.

A boycott works fast, it works every day and you don't need to wait to pass another law to get the offending company to begin paying employees according to the law.

You can change America today! Go to http://dmocrats.org and look for the comment with the title Send this letter to congress! near the bottom.

One outrage I heard of recently involved a friend who was working part-time as a home health care aid, He had to quit the job abruptly after his car was stolen sknce he had no transportation. His employer refused to give him his last paycheck, for time already worked, because he did not give two weeks notice. I can't believe that was remotely legal and I'd be happy to see employers who think they have license to steal in such fashion tossed in jail.

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