People Processes

People Processes


How Many Businesses Were Prosecuted by the DOL Last Month for Primary Violations?

August 24, 2020

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nWS79DfmIZA]
Despite the many drastic developments that the U.S. has undergone in 2020, the Department of Labor remains vigilant in prosecuting and charging those convicted of primary violations. This episode covers the five cases filed last month.
Three unrelated employers in Florida and Minnesota have paid a combined $6,528 in back wages to three employees for violating the paid sick leave requirements of the newly-enacted Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA), according to the DOL’s Wage and Hour Division (WHD). The agency also announced collecting $92,290 for 27 employees from an Idaho company that violated the Davis-Bacon Act, and a civil money penalty of $17,586 for a North Carolina McDonald’s franchise for violating the FLSA’s child labor requirements.
These are the cases:
Medley, Florida-based Martinez Truss Co. has paid an employee $4,352 in back wages for wrongly denying paid sick leave under the FFCRA. The employee had requested time off after their child’s school closed due to the coronavirus pandemic.
After a WHD investigation, the County of Carver, Minnesota, has paid $1,136 in back wages for violating the FFCRA by wrongly denying a worker’s request for paid leave to care for her child when her daycare center closed during the pandemic.
The Boys & Girls Club of Palm Beach County, Florida has paid $1,040 in back wages to an employee after the wage and hour agency determined that the employer violated the FFCRA’s paid sick leave requirements. WHD found that the Boys & Girls Club of Palm Beach County wrongfully denied an employee’s request for emergency paid sick leave after the worker’s doctor-directed the employee to remain at home due to coronavirus-related concerns.
Federal contractor JM Concrete Inc., based in Idaho Falls, Idaho, has paid $92,290 in back wages to 27 employees for violating the Davis-Bacon Act’s prevailing wage requirements on a government project.
Mt. Airy Partners Inc., a Summerfield, North Carolina-based enterprise operating 12 McDonald’s restaurants in North Carolina, has paid a civil money penalty of $17,586 for violating the FLSA’s child labor requirements.
These incidents demonstrate that the DOL is attentive even to “smaller” cases involving amounts as little as $1000. Should your business be prosecuted, the legal costs involved are going to be significantly higher than the penalties, and the wasted time and morale impact on your employees will be huge.
Take the time to review your wage and hour policies, including overtime, minimum wage, prevailing wage, minor payments, employment of minors, required leaves, and considerations around the FFCRA.