Sections
Neighborhoods
Features
Follow Us
NHI Newsletter
Legal Notices
Some Favorite Sites
- 5 Snacks After 10
- Abram Katz
- African independent
- At Risk for HD
- Back To Basics
- barista
- Branford Eagle
- Business NH
- Conn Art Scene
- Cornwall-On-Hudson
- Crosscut
- CT Business Litig
- CT Capitol Report
- CT Energy Blog
- CT Enviro Headlines
- CT Green Scene
- CT Law Tribune
- CT Local Politics
- CT Mirror
- CT News Junkie
- CT Watchdog
- CTV
- Design New Haven
- Gotham Gazette
- Hartford Guardian
- Josiah Brown
- Karman Turn
- La Voz Hispana
- Laurel Club
- Len's Lens
- Magrisso Forte
- Media Attache
- Media Nation
- Medical Intelligence
- Middletown Eye
- MinnPost
- My Left Nutmeg
- NBC Connecticut
- NH Advocate
- NH Register
- NH Review of Books
- NH Youth Map
- Northampton Media
- OneWorld
- Only In Bridgeport
- Oral History Project
- Reddit NH
- Road To Greenness
- Saved By Design
- See Click Fix
- Smartpill Design
- Specials In NH
- St. Louis Beacon
- Taste Of NH
- Tom Ficklin
- Valley Independent Sentinel
- Voice of SD
- VT Digger
- WFSB-TV
- WPKN Today
- WTNH
- Yale Daily News
- YourCT
Government/ Community Links
- Advocate Calendar
- Agency on Aging
- Animal Shelter Volunteers
- Arte Inc.
- Arts Council
- Beth El Keser Israel
- Bike New Haven
- Chamber of Commerce
- Children's Museum
- City of New Haven
- CitySeed
- Citywide Youth
- Community Loan Fund
- Community Mediation
- ConnCAN
- Creative Arts Workshop
- CT BAEO
- CT Tech Council
- Dariba Referrals
- Data Haven
- Elm City Cycling
- Elmseed
- Empower NH
- Friends Of Wooster Sq.
- GAVA
- Habitat For Humanity
- Info New Haven
- IRIS
- Jazz Haven
- Jewish Federation
- Job Finder
- Junta
- Labor History
- LEAP
- Legal Aid Network
- Literacy Coalition
- Magrisso Forte
- Mary Wade
- Music Haven
- New Haven 828
- New Haven Chorale
- New Haven Reads
- New Life Corp.
- NH Bulletin
- NH Land Trust
- NH Symphony
- NH/Leon Sister City
- NHS
- Orchestra NE
- PAR
- Parents Available to Help
- Pat Dillon
- Peace News
- PechaKucha
- Planned Parenthood
- Police
- Promoting Enduring Peace
- Public Allies CT
- Public Library
- Public Schools
- Public Works
- Rainbow Girls
- Register Calendar
- REX
- ROOF
- SAMA
- SCSU Events
- Share Our Voices
- Shubert
- Solar Youth
- Soul-O-Ettes
- Squash Haven
- United Way
- Urban Design League
- Urban Resources Initiative
- Ward 25 Blog
- Ward 26 Blog
- Westville Chabad
- Westville Renaissance
- Westville Synagogue
- Workforce Alliance
- Yale Events
- Yeshiva NH Shul
- Yeshiva Of NH
- Youth Continuum
Case Closed, Sort Of
by Paul Bass | Oct 31, 2005 8:43 am
(1) Comment | Commenting has been closed | E-mail the Author
Posted to: Breaking News, Westville
The head of a not-for-profit agency in town said Monday she has paid all the back money owed to undocumented workers who helped build new artist housing in Westville. The workers walked off the job after charging that a subcontractor exploited their illegal status to avoid paying them.
Seila Mosquera, executive director of Mutual Housing of South Central Connecticut, Inc., said the three workers have received checks for the approximately $1,000 they were owed for their $9 – $10 an hour jobs as construction helpers. The three worked this summer on Arts Lofts West, a $5.3 million government-backed project Mutual Housing is building by the heart of Westville village.
Mutual Housing hired a construction firm called Lab Restoration and Construction Corp. to build the project. The company hired undocumented workers who said they spent much of July and August working full-time but receiving only occasional paychecks. They walked off the job in late August, claiming that they were owed around $4,000 in back pay.
They brought their complaint to John Lugo of the activist group Unidad Latina en Acci√ɬ≥n (Latinos United in Action). The head of Lab Restoration denied the claims to Lugo and threatened to call immigration officials on the workers, according to Lugo. Lab eventually agreed to pay about three-quarters of the outstanding debt. (”Immigrant vs. Immigrant,” New Haven Independent, Oct. 28.)
Lugo then brought the complaint to Mosquera at Mutual Housing. Mosquera said she cut a check Friday for the outstanding money, which she’s deducting from Lab Restoration’s next payment.
Art Abanton, who runs Lab Restoration, denied all the accusations. He claimed he’s being targeted for complaints because he’s black.
“He denied it. I don’t care,” Mosquera said. “People worked. You need to pay them.”
John Lugo said he has found that construction bosses throughout the area shortchange immigrant workers because many of the workers are in the country illegally; the bosses figure the workers won’t complain out of fear of deportation. Lugo wants Mutual Housing to fire Lab Restoration from the Westville job.
“I can’t fire him, because then I would be sued,” Mosquera said. “He fixed the problem. I have a contract with him.”
Click here to read the full story.
Post a Comment
Comment
posted by: Dave on November 1, 2005 5:17am
“I have a contract with him” usually translates to “he was the cheapest contractor I could find”. Immigrant workers will always be abused because of the fear that they have of being reported. This is also a reason that they will work for the types of wages that workers with documents will not. Agencies like Mutual Housing, many of the churches in the area that build addditions, and everyone that has their lawn cut should spend a little time talking with the people they hire ( not the owner of the company, the people that do the work). If they find that the workers are not being paid a living wage, say something nasty to the owner about it. Or you can just continue to treat the workers like the scenery, and then express a liberal’s outrage when you find out they are being abused.
