Labor Department retrieves back wages for garment workers
Wednesday January 01, 2003
By IAN STEWART
Associated Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) About 250 unpaid workers from a bankrupt
clothing manufacturer have reason to celebrate the start of the New
Year.
With the help of the U.S. Department of Labor, the Wins of
California workers finally will be paid $337,000 of the more than
$900,000 owed them in back wages, a Labor Department spokesman said
Tuesday.
For more than 18 months, the Labor Department has been appealing
to the U.S. District Court in San Francisco to release $422,000
held in a ``lock box'' account to pay the workers.
The settlement awarded 80 percent of that amount, or $337,000,
to the workers. The remaining money from the lock box went to pay
the bankruptcy fees and Wins creditor G.E. Capital Commercial
Services Inc., said Labor Department spokesman Tino Serrano.
In July 2001, Wins was prohibited from shipping goods because of
labor violations, including the failure to pay its workers
promptly. By August, however, Wins was permitted to resume shipping
goods, although all proceeds were paid into the special ``lock
box'' fund to be distributed to the unpaid workers.
Efforts to pay the workers with the funds were thwarted when
Wins filed for bankruptcy, prompting creditors to lay claim to the
lock box money. The release of those funds has been delayed by
bankruptcy court proceedings.
``We argued to the court that those funds were not Wins
assets,'' Serrano said. ``Those funds are the workers' back
wages.''
The settlement was signed Tuesday by the Labor Department and
Wins creditors. The department will still try to collect almost $1
million in back wages and penalties from Wins owners Anna Wong and
her husband, ``Toha'' Jimmy Quan, Serrano said.
According to the Oakland office of Sweatshop Watch, an industry
watchdog group, about 250 garment workers mostly Chinese
immigrant women worked for months without pay at Wins of
California, Win Fashion and Win Industries of America. All three
San Francisco factories were owned by Wong and Quan.
The three Wins facilities owe their employees close to $1
million in wages, according to the watchdog group that fights to
protect the rights of immigrant garment workers.
Wins made clothing for customers such as the U.S. Army and Air
Force, Sears, Wal-Mart and Kmart.
(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)