Proposed Wage Theft Legislation Would Strip Violators of Their Ability to Do Business in New York (ProPublica)

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    Proposed Wage Theft Legislation Would Strip Violators of Their Ability to Do Business in New York – By Marcus Baram (Documented) / Feb 6, 2024

    “We did not have the data to understand the scale of the issue in New York State until the ProPublica and Documented series came out last year,” state Sen. Jessica Ramos said.

    This article was produced for ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network in partnership with Documented. Sign up for Dispatches to get stories like this one as soon as they are published.

    New York lawmakers proposed three new bills last week that would make it difficult for wage theft violators to conduct business in the state.

    The legislation would bolster the power of state agencies to crack down on wage theft by stripping violators of their liquor licenses or business licenses, as well as issuing stop-work orders against them.

    The legislation was prompted by reports of rampant wage theft against New York workers, including two investigations published by Documented and ProPublica. The stories revealed that more than 127,000 New Yorkers have been victims of wage theft during a recent five-year period, but that the New York State Department of Labor was unable to recover $79 million in back wages owed to the workers.

    The stories were based on an analysis of two databases of wage theft violations obtained from the U.S. and New York Labor departments. The databases provided previously unreported details on how much money had been stolen from workers and also shed light on which businesses had committed wage theft.

    CONTINUE > https://www.propublica.org/article/wage-theft-law-new-york-violators-doing-business

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