10 laborers getting $170K in back pay after state finds company short-changed them on construction job (NJ)

By: Kevin Shea, for NJ.com
August 9, 2019

Ten construction workers will split a $170,000 settlement with a company the state says underpaid them while working on a construction job at a Trenton senior living community.

The company, Tri County Real Estate Maintenance Co., of Carneys Point, is also paying $30,000 in administrative fees and penalties, the state Department of Labor and Workforce Development announced Friday.

The project at the Trent Center East and West apartments on Greenwood Avenue in Trenton received tax credit incentive funding, through the State Economic Redevelopment and Growth program, and was subject to New Jersey’s prevailing wage laws.

A state Labor Department investigation, sent to the agency by the U.S. Department of Labor, found Tri County underpaid the laborers.

In this case, laborers stated they were paid between $15 and $30 per hour, but the prevailing wage rate was $55.37 per hour for a laborer, the state said.

The state’s Prevailing Wage Act provides level wages for workers on public works projects – to protect workers and prevent unfair labor competition. The rates vary by county and trade, the state says.

“Public contracting is not a right – it is a privilege,” Labor Commissioner Robert Asaro-Angelo said in a statement. “We want all employers to know that our department takes the state’s prevailing wage laws seriously, and we will continue to investigate these matters to protect our taxpayers’ investments.”

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Washington Company Cited for Shorting Construction Workers on Project (WA)

“Integrity vastly underpaid its employees for the work they did,” said Elizabeth Smith, assistant director for L&I’s Fraud Prevention and Labor Standards division. “It’s important that agencies and non-profits understand that using public money on a project means it’s covered under prevailing wage.”

Aug 28, 2017
Occupational Health & Safety

A Washington State Department of Labor & Industries found that six construction workers employed by Integrity Construction LLC were shorted more than $155,000 in wages for work on a Belfair senior center and are owed about $25,000 each for wood framing at the site, the Belfair Hospitality, Unity, and Belonging (HUB) Senior Center. Their employer, Integrity Construction LLC, was on the project from May to August 2015. L&I recently notified the company of the violation.

“Integrity vastly underpaid its employees for the work they did,” said Elizabeth Smith, assistant director for L&I’s Fraud Prevention and Labor Standards division. “By making sure contractors pay their workers fairly, we are creating a level playing field for firms in the construction industry.”

The investigation found the Tacoma company owes $156,692.48 in wages and more than $30,000 in fines and penalties. Integrity did not appeal the violation and is barred from bidding on future public works projects until that money is paid. The Belfair project received $1.86 million from the state’s capital budget, which meant Integrity was required to follow the state’s prevailing wage law. L&I enforces the law.

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