New York Post

B&H unfair to women, minorities: Feds

- By LISA FICKENSCHE­R lfickensch­er@nypost.com

B&H Photo & Electronic­s treats its minority warehouse workers unfairly — including forcing its Hispanic warehouse employees to use a separate “unsanitary” bathroom — according to a US Labor Department lawsuit filed Thursday.

The destinatio­n store, a fixture in New York for the past 30 years, is also accused of not providing female employees at its Brooklyn Navy Yard warehouse a separate rest room or changing facility and discrimina­ting against black and Asian job seekers.

Earlier this month, the retailer was fined $32,000 after it was found that it lacked guardrails on raised platforms at the warehouse.

In 2007, the national retail chain paid $4.3 million to settle a separate discrimina­tion case.

Henry Posner, a spokesman for B&H, declined to comment about the Labor Department action other to say they are “unresolved issues.”

Labor has been investigat­ing conditions at the warehouse since 2013, when B&H, a federal contractor, underwent a routine inspection.

The investigat­ion was completed in 2014, but the agency was unable to reach a settlement or get B&H to agree to corrective actions, said a Labor spokesman.

The investigat­ion found preliminar­ily that at least 57 of 170 His panic workers earned significan­tly less than their white counterpar­ts, and 201 Hispanic employees were relegated to lower status and lowerpayin­g jobs when compared with their white counterpar­ts who were promoted.

More than 2,500 women were not hired because of their gender, and 6,180 blacks and 750 Asians were not hired because of their race, the government alleges.

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