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U.S. Master™ Wage-Hour Guide, 2009 Edition

U.S. Master™ Wage-Hour Guide, 2009 Edition
Presents a first approach to the broad and complex controls under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), and other statutes regulating employee wages and hours.

LABOR & EMPLOYMENT LAW — 11/17/09

Restaurant operators ordered to pay more than $2 million in back wages and damages following DOL investigation

Li Jin Yang and Dong Lin, a wife and husband operating five Oriental Forest restaurants, headquartered in Grandville with locations across the western part of Michigan, have been ordered by a federal court judge to pay $2,030,430 in minimum wage and overtime pay and damages owed to 129 workers following an investigation by the Department of Labor's (DOL) Wage and Hour Division.

"For those employers who take advantage of the most vulnerable workers in this country, the department will not hesitate to enforce federal law to the fullest extent possible," said Secretary of Labor Hilda L. Solis. "We are pleased that workers in this case will receive the back wages they have earned and deserve."

The court also ordered the business owners not to violate minimum wage and overtime pay laws in the future and to make no efforts to have employees return the back wages. The court found that $1,015,215 in back wages is owed, and ordered that an equal amount be paid to the 129 workers as liquidated damages.

The DOL’s investigation found violations at Oriental Forest locations in Grand Rapids, Plainfield Township, Wyoming, Grandville and Newaygo, Mich., covering a three-year span that began in February 2004. Only the Grandville and Wyoming restaurants remain open and operated by the same owners.

The judgment resolves a lawsuit filed by the agency in the Federal District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan that alleged the business owners paid less than time and one-half workers' regular rates for hours over 40 in a single workweek, paid them less than the federal minimum wage, and failed to keep adequate and accurate pay records. Payments to individual workers range from several hundred dollars to as much as $96,000.

For more information on this and other topics, consult CCH Employment Practices Guide or CCH Labor Relations.

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