A 2008 GAO report found that under the Bush administration, the number of wage and hour inspectors dropped from 942 to 732. At the same time, the number of investigations into employers’ refusal to pay minimum wage, overtime—or even any wages at all—has dropped from 47,000 in 1997 to 30,000 in 2008.
Since taking office, Solis has added 250 new inspectors to the wage and hour division, bringing the total to 949.
Solis said the We Can Help effort will work with unions, faith groups and community groups to get the information into work places and neighborhoods. Interfaith Worker Justice (IWJ) also offers a Wage Theft Online Resource Center, which includes a list of resources and information about the wage theft crisis. Says Solis:
If someone is stealing your wages, you can and should call the Department of Labor….We can help, and we will help. If you work in this country, you are protected by our laws. And you can count on the U.S. Department of Labor to see to it that those protections work for you.
There are also efforts on the state and local level to put halt to wage theft. Earlier this year, the Miami- Dade County Commission approved a country-wide wage theft ordinance. In New York State, a bill to toughen penalties for employers who steal workers wages is before the legislature.
In a column in today’s Albany Times Union, Amy Traub of the Drum Major Institute (DMI) and Andrew Freidman of Make the Road New York write:
Enforcement of workplace laws is so inadequate, and penalties are so low, that corrupt businesses often come out ahead. Unscrupulous employers simply factor the risk of getting caught breaking the law into their cost of doing business. Responsible business owners are put at a competitive disadvantage by rival companies that cut costs by cheating their employees.
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