How America’s wage theft capital became an unlikely inspiration for Ontario
Mon., May 30, 2016
California has a massive precarious employment problem, and it's trying to do something about it.
LOS ANGELESThe factory my dad was working at the day I was born sits on the edge of Compton, an industrial district where rail lines and snaking smokestacks border square, tidy homes. If you drive along S. Wilmington Ave., the road swells upward, and from its crest you can see downtown Los Angeles shimmering in the distance.
Dad worked as a plant foreman in the shadow of the City of Angels for eight years before our family packed up in search of better things in Canada. He remembers working such long hours at the plastics factory that he sometimes slept overnight on the shop floor. My mum, who did the books at the same place, recalls undocumented workers mostly migrants from Mexico being paid $3 an hour.
The hard, sprawling city my parents left behind is in fact Americas wage theft capital. An estimated $26.2 million (U.S.) in wages are stolen from ordinary Angelenos every week. One in three Californian workers is low-wage about 4.8 million people. In short, its an unlikely source of inspiration for Ontarians who want better workplace protection.
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I think whats interesting about California is theres a range of things happening, says Deena Ladd, of the Toronto-based Workers Action Centre. Theyre not just raising the minimum wage. Theyre taking on wage theft, theyre taking on issues of enforcement, theyre taking on fair scheduling. And thats basically our same message to the (Ontario) government. We need a systemic approach to deal with the deterioration of working conditions.
As Ontarios Ministry of Labour prepares to release its interim report reviewing its employment and labour laws, California has spent the past two years forging ahead. Things are not perfect. But there is momentum.
Link:
https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2016/05/30/how-americas-wage-theft-capital-became-an-unlikely-inspiration-for-ontario.html