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Affected Bianco Employees Contact: Greater Boston Legal Services - (617) 603-1744 or toll-free at (866) 778-0939 Info for Workers Informacion para Empleados Comunicado de Prensa en Español Michael Bianco, Inc., Agrees to Settle Federal Lawsuit for $850,000 764 Employees of Former New Bedford Factory to Receive Unpaid Wages and Overtime Pay (BOSTON, November 18, 2008) Greater Boston Legal Services (GBLS) announced today an agreement to settle a federal class action lawsuit against Michael Bianco, Inc., the former New Bedford factory that manufactured military gear for the U.S. Department of Defense. The company was the target of a March 2007 federal immigration raid that was broadly criticized for its inhumane treatment of the workers and their families. The settlement agreement provides for payment of hundreds of thousands of dollars in unpaid overtime and wages to 764 former Michael Bianco employees. Legal aid organizations GBLS and South Coastal Counties Legal Services, along with attorney Philip Gordon of the Gordon Law Group, filed the lawsuit last year following the raid, after interviews with detained workers and others exposed a range of labor violations in the factory. The case was filed on behalf of all affected workers, including those who continued to work in the factory as well as those who were detained or deported in the raid. The lawsuit included allegations that Michael Bianco systematically and intentionally violated the laws requiring time-and-a-half for overtime work by creating a sham second corporation called Front Line Defense, Inc. Many employees were paid by Michael Bianco for full-time work on the day shift but then were paid by Front Line Defense for the overtime hours that they worked on a second, evening shift. During the evening shift, these employees often did the same work, on the same machines, as they did during the day, without receiving overtime pay.
The complaint also alleged that Michael Bianco routinely deducted 15 or 30 minutes of pay when workers clocked in as little as one minute late. These wages were withheld even when the workers had arrived on time but had to wait in long lines to clock in because the company did not have enough time clocks. The defendants have agreed to pay a total of $850,000 to settle the case. As part of the agreement, the U.S. Department of Labor (USDOL) will supervise and administer $613,000 in restitution payments to the workers. USDOL today filed a separate federal court complaint and consent judgment which, in accordance with the class action settlement, sets forth Michael Bianco’s agreement to make the restitution payments. The $850,000 settlement will also allocate amounts to New Bedford community groups that support and organize immigrant workers, additional payments to the six named plaintiffs in recognition of their courage in coming forward, and partial compensation for attorneys’ fees and costs incurred by legal services organizations that represented the workers. The amount of each worker’s payment will depend on both the length of employment in the factory and how many overtime hours were worked. Employees who did not work double shifts will receive smaller payments to compensate them for the deductions from pay. All employees who worked for Michael Bianco and/or Front Line Defense between 2004 and March 2007 are entitled to receive restitution payments, regardless of their immigration status or current country of residence. To claim their payments, former Michael Bianco and Front Line Defense employees should contact Greater Boston Legal Services at (617) 603-1744 or toll-free at (866)778-0939. The New Bedford community group Organización Maya K’iche, which has supported the Michael Bianco workers throughout the case, will continue to assist with locating workers and distributing checks. “We’re pleased to recover the wages that the Michael Bianco workers earned and should have been paid,” said Audrey Richardson, a senior attorney at GBLS. “Unfortunately, this settlement achieves only partial justice for workers whose lives and families were torn apart by the raid.” “The exploitative conditions at Michael Bianco were made possible by a climate of fear fostered by our national immigration policies. We hope now that the new presidential administration and Congress will prioritize comprehensive immigration reform that empowers immigrant workers to speak up and enforce their labor rights. Otherwise, employers like Michael Bianco, Agriprocessors, and Howard Industries will continue to profit at hard-working immigrants’ expense,” Richardson concluded.
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