New York area car wash workers get more
than $91,000 each in unpaid wages
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[June 22, 2016]
By Gina Cherelus
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Eighteen immigrant
car wash employees in New York and New Jersey received more than $91,000
each as part of a federal court settlement for unpaid wages, making it
the biggest per-worker recovery in the car wash industry, lawyers said
on Tuesday.
The agreement awarded the final part of a $1.65 million settlement
to 18 workers who were earning less than $20,000 a year at four car
washes owned by J.V. Car Wash Ltd., said one of the lawyers who
brought the suit in 2011.
Steven Arenson of the employment litigation firm Arenson Dittmar &
Karban said each worker on average will receive over $91,000, with
the highest being close to $200,000 for two people who were employed
the longest. With $750,000 already paid last year, the remaining
$900,000 was disbursed on Tuesday.
Lawyers for the defendant declined to comment.
"For all immigrants, all workers, who toil under hardship, this case
stands as a resounding message that the American law does protect
the worker," Arenson told a news conference.
The employees at the New York car washes were paid $50 to $70 for
12-hour shifts without a break, according to the lawsuit, well below
the minimum wage, currently $9 per hour in New York. In New Jersey,
where the minimum wage is $8.38 per hour, workers were paid $35 a
day for a 10-hour shift.
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio signed the Car Wash
Accountability Act into law in 2015 to protect workers. Car wash
owners have sued the city over the act, claiming it gives
preferential treatment to unions.
Low-wage workers nationwide have been demanding higher pay,
including fast-food workers who staged protests and strikes last
year support of a $15 minimum wage. Democratic presidential
contender Bernie Sanders championed a $15 minimum wage in his
campaign.
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Attorney Steven Arenson (R) delivers a check to immigrant car wash
worker Michel Rodriguez at a news conference, where 18 immigrant car
wash workers received the final part of a $1.6 million federal court
settlement for unpaid wages after a five-year case against four car
washes in New York City and New Jersey, in Manhattan, New York City,
U.S., June 21, 2016. REUTERS/Mike Segar
In 2015, the New York attorney general's office sued Domino's Pizza
Inc for wage theft by franchisees.
One of the car wash plaintiffs, Michel Rodriguez, said he began
working at a J.V. Car Wash location about week after emigrating from
the Dominican Republic.
"It was crazy," Rodriguez, 29, told the news conference. "For you to
start working 7 in the morning though 7 p.m. for 12 hours straight
with no lunch break in a very, very cold winter."
(Reporting by Gina Cherelus; Editing by Daniel Trotta and Dan
Grebler)
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