VTMBH Article: Body
Seven Mexicans who worked at Café Liberty, which closed as a consequence of September 11th, received checks yesterday for their last weeks wages.
After a three month investigation, the New York State Attorney General forced Kevin Kim, owner of Café Liberty, on Liberty Street, to pay $7,172.43 he owed seven of his employees for time worked at his establishment and for cleaning Café Seaport, another of Kims businesses, after September 11th.
According to Degelmo Baldovinos, Antonio Rodriguez, Oscar Delgado, Nicolas Rodriguez, Javier Rodriguez, Jose Rolando and Octavio De La Rosa, Kim always paid them weeks late and after he closed his business, he did not pay them for the last weeks. The employees looked for help at the el Centro de Trabajadores Latino, (the Manhattan-based Latino Workers Center) the organization which filed the complaint with the Attorney Generals office.
Attorney General Eliot Spitzer said he understood that business owners in Lower Manhattan suffered many losses because of the terrorist acts, but this does not justify not paying for hours they worked.
Spitzer added that this case is one of several cases his office settled in the last three years concerning supermarkets employers who did not paid their employees. It is the same message for all businesses owners: employees deserve to get paid for the hours they have worked, and we do not accept any excuses.
Showing his check, Baldovinos, who worked five years at Café Liberty, praised the Attorney Generals labor to recuperate their wages, but said that Kim still owed them for overtime. They paid us for the last four weeks, but we wanted all the money. We were exploited for four years and we will continue to fight with el Centro.
Baldovinos, who is now unemployed, said that for many years they worked 12 hours, six days a week for $220 a week.
De la Rosa added that they did not denounce the Korean owner of Café Liberty because they needed the employment and feared being deported. We were afraid of complaining because we are illegal immigrants. I have four children to support. We like to work.
He added that when he started working with Kim he earned $220 a week. He probably had problems, said he would pay us what the law said, $5.15 or $6 per hour with overtime. Also, he said that he would give us a half an hour for lunch, but we never took it because as soon as we were going to take it, he would send us to do something else.
Monica Santana, executive director of el Centro, said they were satisfied with the Attorney Generals work. Now we are fighting for the extra hours, because many of them worked there more than four years.
We rely on what state law says: an employee has the right to claim wages not paid from the last six years, extra wages or minimum salary there are so many employers violating laws that many times it is impossible to do everything we must do. In this case, he owes some employees almost
After a three month investigation, the New York State Attorney General forced Kevin Kim, owner of Café Liberty, on Liberty Street, to pay $7,172.43 he owed seven of his employees for time worked at his establishment and for cleaning Café Seaport, another of Kims businesses, after September 11th.
According to Degelmo Baldovinos, Antonio Rodriguez, Oscar Delgado, Nicolas Rodriguez, Javier Rodriguez, Jose Rolando and Octavio De La Rosa, Kim always paid them weeks late and after he closed his business, he did not pay them for the last weeks. The employees looked for help at the el Centro de Trabajadores Latino, (the Manhattan-based Latino Workers Center) the organization which filed the complaint with the Attorney Generals office.
Attorney General Eliot Spitzer said he understood that business owners in Lower Manhattan suffered many losses because of the terrorist acts, but this does not justify not paying for hours they worked.
Spitzer added that this case is one of several cases his office settled in the last three years concerning supermarkets employers who did not paid their employees. It is the same message for all businesses owners: employees deserve to get paid for the hours they have worked, and we do not accept any excuses.
Showing his check, Baldovinos, who worked five years at Café Liberty, praised the Attorney Generals labor to recuperate their wages, but said that Kim still owed them for overtime. They paid us for the last four weeks, but we wanted all the money. We were exploited for four years and we will continue to fight with el Centro.
Baldovinos, who is now unemployed, said that for many years they worked 12 hours, six days a week for $220 a week.
De la Rosa added that they did not denounce the Korean owner of Café Liberty because they needed the employment and feared being deported. We were afraid of complaining because we are illegal immigrants. I have four children to support. We like to work.
He added that when he started working with Kim he earned $220 a week. He probably had problems, said he would pay us what the law said, $5.15 or $6 per hour with overtime. Also, he said that he would give us a half an hour for lunch, but we never took it because as soon as we were going to take it, he would send us to do something else.
Monica Santana, executive director of el Centro, said they were satisfied with the Attorney Generals work. Now we are fighting for the extra hours, because many of them worked there more than four years.
We rely on what state law says: an employee has the right to claim wages not paid from the last six years, extra wages or minimum salary there are so many employers violating laws that many times it is impossible to do everything we must do. In this case, he owes some employees almost