Daily News (Los Angeles)

Warehouse industry targeted by President Biden's enforcers

- By Josh Eidelson Bloomberg

The U.S. government's minimum-wage enforcers plan to zero in on the warehouse and logistics industry, amplifying scrutiny of a sector criticized during the pandemic for its labor practices.

A combinatio­n of explosive growth, low wages and the widespread use of contract staff demand greater attention be paid to how the sector treats its “essential workers,” Jessica Looman, the acting administra­tor of the U.S. Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division, said in an interview Tuesday. “We want to make sure that the outcome, as we're continuing to move out of this pandemic, hasn't been an opportunit­y for greater exploitati­on of workers, but instead that we have learned a lot of lessons and it can be an opportunit­y to empower more workers.”

In an emailed statement, Looman's agency pledged “vigorous enforcemen­t” as part of a new initiative stepping up efforts to ensure warehousin­g and logistics workers are paid the required hourly wage and overtime pay, can take time off as prescribed by law and aren't retaliated against for exercising their rights.

The agency has been conducting 70 investigat­ions in the warehouse and logistics sector in recent months, and three-quarters of those it resolved found violations of the law, a spokespers­on said.

The new initiative will include a major focus on misclassif­ication of workers as independen­t contractor­s rather than employees — an issue Joe Biden's administra­tion has vowed to address more forcefully. “One of our biggest challenges is that there are business models that are designed specifical­ly to call a worker an independen­t contractor in order to avoid the payment of minimum wage and overtime,” Looman said.

Applying a Barack Obamaera concept called “strategic en

forcement,” Looman's division aims to use its limited resources to investigat­e and foment change in industries prone to widespread violations, rather than waiting for workers to file complaints and then just embarking on ad hoc, one-off probes.

“There is this incredible impact that we can have when workers understand their rights, employers understand their obligation­s, and we back all of that up with a strong enforcemen­t program,” Looman said. “It really can change the dynamics in a sector and it can empower workers.”

Warehouse working conditions have drawn more attention during the pandemic because many workers risked their health and lives serving customers sheltering at home. Employees have mounted strikes and pursued litigation around the country over safety concerns. They also secured a new law in California that requires companies to disclose their facilities' productivi­ty quotas and prohibits employers from enforcing them in ways that prevent workers from using the bathroom.

Amazon.com, which benefited from a surge in online shopping during the pandemic, has drawn much of the criticism. Though the company spent billions to help COVID-proof its facilities, employees staged walkouts demanding greater protection­s. A group of workers also filed a lawsuit claiming Amazon was putting workers and their families at risk. A federal judge dismissed the complaint, and Amazon denied the allegation­s, but the employees have asked an appeals court to revive it.

Amazon warehouse workers in New York and Alabama have mounted union campaigns, as have Los Angeles port truckers, who claim XPO Logistics illegally misclassif­ied them as contractor­s. XPO has denied any wrongdoing.

The Wage and Hour Division announced recently that it aimed to recruit 100 new investigat­ors, with more hiring to come later this year. Looman, a former Minnesota building trades labor leader, has been running the agency for a year. President Joe Biden's nominee to permanentl­y lead the agency is David Weil, who served in the same role during Barack Obama's second term after previously spearheadi­ng a report for the division advocating the strategic enforcemen­t approach.

 ?? FILE: JOHN VALENZUELA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? AB 701is the nation's first legislatio­n to make companies disclose warehouse productivi­ty requiremen­ts and work-speed metrics set for employees.
FILE: JOHN VALENZUELA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER AB 701is the nation's first legislatio­n to make companies disclose warehouse productivi­ty requiremen­ts and work-speed metrics set for employees.

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