Los Angeles Workers Face More Wage, Labor Violations Than N.Y., Chicago

Low-wage workers in Los Angeles experience more wage and labor violations than low-wage workers in Chicago and New York, a new study by the UCLA’s Institute for Research on Labor and Employment has found.

The survey found that low-wage workers in Los Angeles regularly experience violations of basic laws that mandate a minimum wage and overtime pay and are frequently forced to work off the clock or during their breaks. Other violations included a lack of required payroll documentation, being paid late, tip stealing, and employer retaliation.

“In nearly every case, the violation rates are higher in Los Angeles than in New York and Chicago,” the study’s authors Ruth Milkman,Ana Luz González and Victor Narro said.

Among their findings:

“These problems are not limited to the underground economy or to a few bad apples,” the survey’s authors said. The survey found that both large and small employers across a variety of industries regularly violate the law. And the report found that the type of job in which a worker is employed is a far better predictor of violations than the worker’s demographic characteristics.

To view the full report, visit http://www.irle.ucla.edu/events/2010/pdf/LAwagetheft.pdf.