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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR: Department of Labor Investigation Results in Pennsylvania Landscaping Company Paying $74,290 in Back Wages and Penalties for H-2b Visa Program Violations

PENNSYLVANIA RECORD

Wednesday, December 25, 2024

DEPARTMENT OF LABOR: Department of Labor Investigation Results in Pennsylvania Landscaping Company Paying $74,290 in Back Wages and Penalties for H-2b Visa Program Violations

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U.S. Department of Labor issued the following announcement on Dec. 31.

Silvis Group Inc. – a Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania, landscaping company – has entered consent findings with the U.S. Department of Labor requiring payment of $74,290 in back wages and penalties for violating the labor provisions of the H-2B temporary visa program.

An investigation by the Department's Wage and Hour Division (WHD) determined - that from January 17, 2015, to January 7, 2017 - Silvis Group Inc. violated requirements of the H-2B visa program by:

Denying employment for landscaping and grounds keeping positions to two qualified U.S. applicants, resulting in $8,414 in back wages for the U.S. applicants;

Failing in some weeks to pay overtime at the correct rate, after illegally excluding bonus payments from the calculation, resulting in $4,457 in back wages for 30 H-2B employees from Mexico;

Taking impermissible deductions for uniforms and housing in poor condition, resulting in $16,350 in back wages for 30 H-2B employees from Mexico;

Failing to cooperate with and actively working to hinder the WHD investigation;

Misrepresenting dates of temporary need and the number of employees needed on its Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker and Foreign Labor Certification forms; and

Failing to meet the requirement to contractually forbid third parties from seeking payment from employees.

Silvis Group Inc. has paid a civil money penalty of $45,068 for substantial and willful failure to comply with H-2B provisions.

"The H-2B visa program includes specific requirements employers must follow to participate. When employers fail to comply with these requirements, we will hold them accountable," said Wage and Hour District Director John DuMont, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

"This case highlights the U.S. Department of Labor's efforts to ensure that employers understand and abide by the provisions of the program to safeguard American employees against displacement while protecting foreign workers from being paid less than the wage they were promised," said Regional Philadelphia Solicitor Oscar L. Hampton III.

In addition to paying the back wages and penalty, Silvis Group Inc. agrees to future compliance with the H-2B provisions, and three years of monitoring with an independent third party auditor.

Original source can be found here.

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