Our enforcement efforts and unions are creating a brighter future for workers. U.S. Department of Labor | October 24, 2024 |
Acting Secretary Su celebrated milestone of recovering $1B in wages and damages for workers under Biden-Harris Administration In Nanticoke, Acting Secretary of Labor Julie Su and Wage and Hour Administrator Jessica Looman announced that, since the start of the Biden-Harris administration, the department has recovered more than $1 billion in back wages and damages for 615,000 U.S. workers. The officials joined Northeast Building and Construction Trades Council representatives and local workers to tour the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workersâ Local 163 training facility. They also discussed the importance of holding employers accountable and ensuring workers get what they are owed. |
Enforcement efforts recover over $984K for 279 workers Investigators recovered back wages and damages for workers from employers around the country last week, including restaurant and home care industries. Read their success stories below. $442K for 29 workers at four Milwaukee restaurants $317K for 45 Southern California home care workers $120K from a Huddle House franchisee for 177 Oklahoma employees $105K for 28 Grand Rapids restaurant workers |
In Detroit, Su highlights $635M in funding to secure carpenterâs union pension plan More than 22,000 workers, retirees and their families in the Detroit Carpenter's Pension Plan had been bracing for reductions of as much as 70 percent in their hard-earned retirement benefits. Thanks to the Biden-Harris administration and the American Rescue Plan Act, these retirement savings are now secure and will be paid in full. On Oct. 17, the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. approved $635 million in Special Financial Assistance for the pension plan. Last week, Acting Secretary Su celebrated the victory with union leaders, representatives, workers and labor advocates in Detroit. |
Alabama countertop company failed to protect worker fatally struck by stone slab OSHA investigators found Huntsville Granite and Marble could have prevented the death of a 33-year-old employee who was struck by a slab weighing thousands of pounds. âWith the right procedures, equipment and training, this tragedy could have been avoided,â said OSHA Area Office Director Joel Batiz in Birmingham. OSHA issued the company citations for five serious violations. |
Su applauds home care workersâ organizing success in Michigan In Michigan, Acting Secretary Su applauded a recent bill to allow the stateâs individual homecare workers to unionize as welcome news for the care community and for the workers and families who rely on the services they provide. Citing a department study that shows how investing in the care infrastructure and family-supporting policies at levels similar to other countries could increase the U.S. labor force and generate up to $775 billion annually, Su said: âWhen we talk about care infrastructure, and people say, âHow can we afford that?â I say, âHow can we afford not to?ââ |
Investing in care as infrastructure and growing the workforce Acting Secretary Su, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen and Rep. Chris Pappas gathered in New Hampshire to visit A Place to Grow, a Brentwood early learning center. They discussed the economic impact of childcare workers and how the Biden-Harris administrationâs historic investments are supporting caregiving and increasing the number of women in the nationâs labor force. The centerâs apprenticeship program provides a pathway for care workers into good, family-sustaining jobs. While in the Granite State, the acting secretary also stopped by the New Hampshire Job Corps Center, where graduates will be connected with employers working on more than $1 billion in infrastructure projects. |
| Alleged bias costs $900K The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center will pay $900,000 in back wages and interest to resolve alleged racial hiring discrimination affecting 6,123 Black applicants. | |
| Preventable trench death Three Massachusetts contractors didnât protect a worker who died after being struck and then buried by a house foundation in a 6-foot-deep trench. They face $283,115 in penalties. | |
| Manufacturer fined $257K A Texas school furnishings manufacturerâs lack of machine guards endangered employees, including one who suffered permanent injuries. | |
| Child labor violations A Jacksonville waterpark faces $151,606 in penalties for assigning minors with hazardous work and allowing them to work late hours. | |
Grant funds change workersâ lives As Kimberly Rush struggled to juggle oncology appointments and work at a Safeway deli, she also found time to attend a cable-wiring program at Mesa Community College in Phoenix, a 45-minute drive to and from her home. Fortunately, her training was funded in part by one of our grants, which emphasize not just skills-building, but providing related assistance to ensure workers have the support they need to pursue their dreams. Read how this grant allowed Rush to pursue her dreams. |
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