According to a new study by Rutgers University’s Workplace Justice Lab@RU in partnership with the Workers Defense Project, Torres is among the 3 million Texas workers that have been paid less than the stagnant $7.25 an hour minimum wage between 2009 and 2022. Some of them have outstanding wages ordered from the TWC that have not been collected from employers.

While nearly $99 million in wages were ordered across more than 57,000 cases from 2010 to 2020, according to the report, 80% of those payments have yet to be received by workers.

Wage theft is persistent across Texas, costing individual workers nearly $4,000 a year on average in minimum wage violations, and over $12 billion as a group over the last 14 years.

“Unfortunately, our findings demonstrate that the Texas Workforce Commission has failed to recover tens of millions of dollars, allowing non-compliant employers to violate workers’ rights with impunity,” said Jenn Round, director of the labor standards enforcement program for the Workplace Justice Lab@RU. “This inaction leaves low-wage workers vulnerable to exploitation and puts compliant employers at a disadvantage.”

    • scoobford@lemmy.one
      ·
      11 months ago

      They likely do. While they are extremely ineffectual, our state assistance agencies are staffed by very well intentioned people.

      The problem is the corruption at the top, in political positions, and the idiots thinking they should pull the ladder up behind them by defunding everything that isn't a police or roadway agency.