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WASHINGTON (Map, News) - About a dozen immigrant drywallers — some illegal — were never paid for their work last summer at a Reston Town Center project by their employer, Salvador Blanco, an unlicensed labor broker, according to contractors on the job.
Among them was Flor and her husband, Juan Carlos, both illegal immigrants from El Salvador. The couple, who asked to be identified by their first names only because they feared deportation, said when they weren’t paid for a month’s work, their family back home had to sell what little property they had to cover the medical bills for their sickly 4-year-old daughter.
The workers eventually received compensation totaling about $35,000 from C.J. Coakley Co., the subcontractor that hired Blanco, and Hitt Construction, the general contractor, after carpenters union officials alerted the contractors and property owner, Boston Properties, of the problem.
Calls to Blanco were not returned.
The couple could have legally filed a complaint with the federal Department of Labor, but Flor said when she tried, questions about her legal status scared her away.
Flor’s story is just a sample of the underground construction labor market that legislators and union officials say tops $1 billion in the region.
As many as 60 labor brokers like Blanco operate in the area, union officials said. Oftentimes, the brokers improperly classify workers so they can skirt tax and workers’ compensation laws, officials added. When they don’t pay into the system, it’s taxpayers and legitimate business owners who pick up the tab.
“These people are cheating the system and have repealed every benefit we’ve fought hard for — workers’ compensation, Social Security,” said Del. Cheryl Glenn, D-Baltimore, who has introduced legislation in Annapolis, Md., to crack down on the brokers.
There has been no such legislation introduced in Virginia, but the problem is getting a closer look, lawmakers said.
“We need more transparency,” said Del. Mark Sickles, D-Fairfax. “Builders often don’t know what happens after they hire a contractor. There’s so many arm’s-length relationships.”
Labor brokers can cut costs for subcontractors who are always vying for the lowest bid, said George Isner, a union organizer for the Mid-Atlantic Regional Council of Carpenters. As workers’ compensation costs have gone up, many subcontractors have sliced their permanent staffs, turning to labor brokers to fill them out, he said.
Douglas Ayers, president of C.J. Coakley, said he was unaware of Blanco’s hiring practices, and added he rarely uses labor brokers. He said he’s planning to sue Blanco for restitution.
Flor has become wary of working for labor brokers, although oftentimes they’re the only avenue to finding a job, she said.
“We came here to work, and we expect to get paid for it,” she said.
fklopott@dcexaminer.com



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12:11 PM MST on Tue., Apr. 1, 2008 re: "Immigrant workers reportedly not paid for Reston project"
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Johnson said:
First the title of the article should be "Illegal immigrant workers..." because they are in our country illegally. There would be no problem for Flor and husband or opportunity to take advantage of them if they were not here illegally. They are by any definition, criminals. They should not have been hired by anyone. They were hired by Mr. Salvador Blanco who I suspect knew exactly what he was doing. The use of labor subcontractors is common in this area, especially since immigrant labor has largely replaced the American work force. Contractors are not allowed to ask the immigration status of prospective new hires and with the ready availability of fake documents and lax enforcment of immigration law this sort of thing will continue.
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cullisongs said:
To finish my previous comment, “ ... Del. Cheryl Glenn, D-Baltimore, who has introduced legislation in Annapolis, Md., to crack down on the brokers.” Sorry Cheryl baby, your focus should be on cracking down on illegal aliens and the companies that hire them. The labor brokers are just a symptom of the problem. I don’t think MD needs any new laws. Try enforcing the ones you have! Unlicensed labor brokers, whether brokering legal or illegal labor, are already violating the law by not having a license. Labor brokers brokering ILLEGAL labor are certainly guilty of human trafficking. Does MD not have laws against human trafficking? ~“‘We came here to work, and we expect to get paid for it,’ she said.” Sorry Flor, again, no sympathy here. I expected you to respect our borders and our laws, but you chose to ignore that expectation. What’s the difference between that and your expectation to get paid for your [illegal] labors in Herndon?
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cullisongs said:
What’s wrong with this story? First, it notes that some of the workers who wern’t paid are illegal. Second, the labor broker is unlicensed. ~“The workers eventually received compensation totaling about $35,000.” The article muddies the story at this point. Who got part of that $35,000, all the workers or just the legal workers? ~“Calls to Blanco were not returned.” Surely this reporter could have uncovered whether Blanco was arrested and charged for being unlicensed without needing to talk to him in person. ~“The couple could have legally filed a complaint with the federal Department of Labor, but Flor [the illegal alien] said when she tried, questions about her legal status scared her away.” Am I supposed to be sympathetic? Flor and her hubby are ILLEGAL ALIENS! They should not have any recourse to DOL programs which are taxpayer-funded and intended to protect LEGAL workers in this country. Hooray for DOL for questioning Flor’s status.
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Paul Shaffer said:
I understand all to well how easy it is to blame the undocumented worker, but what we all need to remember is that there wouldn't be any undocumented workers here if we jailed the employers that hire them. Unscrupulous business owners are the real culprit in that they hire the illegals to lower their labor costs. That drives down the standard of living for all of us who live and work in the United States as legal citizens, forcing our wages down. We don't need to build fences at our borders to solve the problem; just put the unscrupulous business owners inside the fences we already have around our prisons. When there are no jobs available to the undocumented workers they will stay home.
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Examiner Reader said:
Human rights are greater than profit for contractors and labor brokers. If you work hard and earn you pay then pay the workers. Just because they are here in America illegally doesn't give anybody right to abused them. Free Trade doesn't mean FREE LABOR TOO....
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Examiner Reader said:
"Flor has become wary of working for labor brokers, although oftentimes they’re the only avenue to finding a job, she said." If Flor and her husband were not here ILLEGALLY they would not be having a problem. Illegal immigrants have no rights, they are here ILLEGALLY, they are criminal aliens. They should be deported immediately. It is unreasonable to expect contractors to do at their own expense what the government has failed to do. If the local governments would participate in identifying and removing illegal immigrants instead of supporting them at taxpayer expense this situation would not exist.
7 agree | 1 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Ahh, isn't that to bad, they had to sell off property in their country. If they have property why are they here??? That is the chance you take when you are here illegally. Even your own people mess you over and try to exploit you, do yourselves a favor and go home, so these kinds of things won't happen to you. And you are always crying about some sick kid, the only kids we care about are the ones that may never see their parents again because they are fighting a WAR. GET REAL
22 agree | 17 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Some American citizens and illegal immigrants still do not get it;that illegal does mean illegal. Because of this determined ignorance, problems keep mounting, while many just ignore the facts. It's sad, but there is an answer-abide by the law!
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Examiner Reader said:
I don't agree with illegal immigrant, but I do agree with being paid for working no matter if you are illegal. This is bigger then what is being reported. Why did a Reston project allow an unlicensed contractor to do the work? Why didn't this project verify all workers and contractors are legalized?
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Examiner Reader said:
Illegal immigrants working with an illegal labor broker; using forged documents; not paying taxes and hiding to avoid deportation -- supposedly don't get paid. Well, BOO-HOO! Judging by their definite pattern of dishonesty, why should anyone believe them?
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