May 27, 2025

US Department of Labor recovers $594K in back wages, damages for 419 workers denied overtime by Florida construction contractor

LEESBURG, FL – The U.S. Department of Labor has recovered $594,313 in back wages and damages for 419 workers after a federal investigation found a Leesburg-based employer failed to pay workers all of their required overtime wages.

May 23, 2025

US Department of Labor announces Trump Administration appointees for Wage and Hour Division

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Labor today announced five political appointees for the Wage and Hour Division, including an acting administrator and four policy advisors. 

The team will help Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer and Deputy Secretary Keith Sonderling put the American worker first by carrying out the division’s critical mission to promote and achieve compliance with labor standards that protect and enhance the welfare of the nation's workforce. 

May 22, 2025

US Department of Labor recovers $207K in back wages, damages for 157 workers after Michigan-based contractor failed to pay correct overtime wages

LOUISVILLE, KY – The U.S. Department of Labor has recovered more than $207,470 in back wages and damages for 157 workers after finding a Michigan-based electrical services contractor failed to pay proper overtime rates to workers at job sites in Arizona and Kentucky.

May 12, 2025

US Department of Labor finds child labor, safety violations at Meadville manufacturing facility after investigation of 16-year-old worker’s injury

MEADVILLE, PA  Multiple U.S. Department of Labor investigations into a minor-aged worker’s fingertip amputation in May 2024 found a Meadville manufacturing company violated federal law and exposed employees to a half dozen serious workplace safety violations.  

May 6, 2025

US Department of Labor seeking janitorial workers owed overtime, damages after investigation, litigation recovers $3.8M from Hawaii employers

HONOLULU – The U.S. Department of Labor is actively seeking hundreds of workers who are owed their share of more than $3.8 million in unpaid overtime withheld deliberately by a Kilauea staffing agency and Lihue cleaning contractor after a federal investigation and litigation that followed.  

May 6, 2025

US Department of Labor recovers over $1.4M in wages for 2,620 workers after employer failed to pay overtime wages

SAN JOSE, CA – The U.S. Department of Labor has recovered more than $1.4 million in back wages for more than 2,600 employees after finding a large, San Jose-based electrical engineering and construction company failed to pay them proper overtime rates, a violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act.

May 1, 2025

US Department of Labor issues guidance on independent contractor misclassification enforcement

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division today issued a field assistance bulletin providing guidance on how to determine employee or independent contractor status when enforcing the Fair Labor Standards Act

April 28, 2025

US Department of Labor seeks input from building, large-scale construction contractors to set prevailing wages, fringe benefits in Houston area

HOUSTON – The U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division encourages employers, stakeholders, and others in Southeast Texas’ building and heavy construction industries to help establish accurate prevailing wage rates and fringe benefits for workers on federally funded and assisted projects.

January 17, 2025

US Department of Labor recovers $319K in back wages for 49 workers misclassified as independent contractors by Louisiana landscaping company

NEW ORLEANS  The U.S. Department of Labor has recovered $319,065 in back wages for 49 workers employed by a New Orleans landscaping company that misclassified them as independent contractors and, by doing so, denied them overtime pay.

January 17, 2025

Phoenix drywall, painting contractor must pay more than $7.4M in wages, damages after deliberately denying overtime to over 1,400 employees

PHOENIX – The U.S. Department of Labor has obtained a consent judgment ordering two commonly owned Arizona drywall and painting companies to pay $7,450,000 in back wages and damages after investigators found the employers willfully denied overtime pay to more than 1,400 employees.

January 17, 2025

US Department of Labor recovers $446K in back wages, damages from 2 Louisiana home care providers for 88 misclassified workers

NEW ORLEANS  The U.S. Department of Labor has recovered $446,334 in back wages and liquidated damages from two northwest Louisiana home care companies that misclassified 88 workers as independent contractors, depriving them of overtime wages in violation of federal law. 

January 17, 2025

US Department of Labor secures consent judgment recovering $63K in back wages, liquidated damages from Subway franchisee for workers at 6 Massachusetts locations

Date of action:                       Jan. 13, 2025

Type of action:                      Consent judgment and order 

January 16, 2025

Department of Labor obtains judgment to recover $66K in wages, damages for 13 workers denied tips, overtime wages by Oklahoma restaurant operator

OKLAHOMA CITY  The U.S. Department of Labor has obtained a consent judgment and injunction to recover $66,000 in back wages and liquidated damages for 13 restaurant workers whose Oklahoma City employer kept employee tips and failed to pay overtime in violation of federal labor regulations.

January 16, 2025

US Department of Labor finds Oklahoma mental health clinic contractor illegally fired worker who used federally protected medical leave

Employer name:               CREOKS Health Services, operating as TruHealth Integrated Care

Investigation sites:         4103 South Yale Ave., Suite C 

January 16, 2025

Department of Labor recovers $844K in back wages, damages for 158 workers illegally deprived of overtime wages by Louisiana home care providers

 

NEW ORLEANS  The findings of two recent U.S. Department of Labor investigations show misclassification of employees as independent contractors is an ongoing concern for home care industry workers in Louisiana and throughout the nation as the practice deprives them of their full wages and other important benefits.

January 16, 2025

Department of Labor secures agreement from cleaning contractor to pay penalties, take steps to prevent dangerous child labor employment

CHICAGO – The U.S. Department of Labor has entered into an agreement with a Tennessee cleaning contractor that requires the employer to pay $400,000 in civil money penalties, monitor and audit policies to prevent the employment of children in dangerous jobs, and maintain a toll-free number for reporting concerns about the illegal employment of children.

January 16, 2025

US Department of Labor recovers $60K in back wages, damages for 10 Chicago sanitation workers denied overtime pay

Employer:      Green Maintenance Services Inc., Jan Jarosz

Action:            Fair Labor Standards Act consent judgment and order

Courts:           U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, Chicago

January 15, 2025

Little Caesars’ franchisee pays $26K in penalties for employing children to operate oven, dough mixer, work beyond allowed hours

FARMINGTON HILLS, MI – A Farmington Hills Little Caesars restaurant employed minors in violation of federal child labor regulations by assigning them to operating dangerous equipment such as dough mixers and ovens and allowing  three 15-year-olds to work past 7 p.m. on school nights. 

January 15, 2025

US Department of Labor reaches agreement with Perdue Farms, secures judgment against staffing agency to address child labor violations

PHILADELPHIA ‒ The U.S. Department of Labor has entered into an agreement with Perdue Farms Inc. and secured a separate agreement with temporary staffing agency Staff Management Solutions LLC and SMX LLC, collectively referred to as “SMX,” to address child labor violations found in an investigation of Perdue’s poultry processing facility in Accomac, Virginia. 

January 14, 2025

El Departamento de Trabajo de EE. UU. multa a un padre y a una hija contratistas agrícolas con US$166.000 por infringir las normas del programa H-2A en Carolina del Norte; ambos quedan inhabilitados durante 3 años

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RALEIGH, NC – El Departamento de Trabajo de Estados Unidos ha excluido a un padre y a su hija de Snow Hill durante tres años de un programa federal por infracciones extensas de las regulaciones federales.