Immigrant Detainees Sue Private Prison for Paying Them $1 Per Day for Forced Labor
http://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/31231-immigrant-detainees-sue-private-prison-for-paying-them-1-per-day-for-forced-labor
Nine current and former immigrant detainees are allowed to file a lawsuit against a private prison contractor that paid them $1 a day for forced labor at a Colorado detention center, a court ruled this week.
The complaint charged that the contractor GEO Group, a privately-owned prison operator, randomly picked six detainees and forced them to clean rooms at the Aurora Detention Facility, where they were housed by threatening to put those who refused to work (for no pay) in the hole,' or solitary confinement. Under GEOs Detainee Voluntary Work Program, plaintiffs allegedly scrubbed bathrooms, showers, toilets, and windows, and did laundry in the medical facility. They also prepared and served detainee meals for law enforcement events sponsored by GEO, performed clerical work for GEO, prepared clothing for newly arriving detainees, provided barber services to detainees, and ran the facilitys law library.
For all that labor, they were either paid $1 a day, or nothing at all.
The complaint argues that GEO violated Colorados Minimum Wage Law, which requires that employers pay employees at least the minimum wage for each hour worked. As of January 2015, that amounts to $8.23 an hour in Colorado. The federal Voluntary Work Programs pay rate of $1 was set in 1950 and has not been adjusted since.
Using forced detainee labor is an integral tool in maintaining GEOs profitability under its contracts with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Andrew Free, a Nashville-based immigrants rights attorney, said in a statement. GEOs business model at these ICE facilities is to boost corporate profits by violating the law. The courts decision today represents an important step forward in ending that morally bankrupt business model.
In response to a request from the Colorado alternative newspaper Westword, the GEO Group corporate headquarters said that the volunteer work program wage rates are set by the federal government. GEOs facilities, including the Aurora, Colo., facility, provide high quality services in safe, secure, and humane residential environments, and our company strongly refutes allegations to the contrary, the statement continued.