US: DC restaurant owner faces lawsuit over alleged wage theft of African migrant workers
要約
Date Reported: 2023年8月28日
場所: アメリカ合衆国
企業
Swahili Village - Employer関連
Total individuals affected: Number unknown
移住者・移民労働者: ( Number unknown - アフリカ , レストラン及びバー , Gender not reported , Unknown migration status )課題
Wage Theft , Minimum Wage , Mandatory overtime , Reasonable Working Hours & Leisure Time , 威嚇及び脅迫 , 情報へのアクセス , Denial of leave回答
Response sought: いいえ
取られた措置: The lawsuit was filed by Washington DC's Attorney General
情報源のタイプ: News outlet
"Kenyan owner of US-Swahili restaurant in court for paying workers Sh. 720 per hour,"
Award-winning Kenyan businessman and owner of the Swahili Restaurant in Washington DC, Kevin Onyona has been taken to court on accusations of underpaying his employees.
The restaurant... is said to violate the US's minimum wage law by paying its staff as little as Sh. 725 ($5) by the hour, inclusive of tips.
The lawsuit which was filed by Washington DC's Attorney General's Office further contended that Onyona and his business partner Emad Shoeb neglected to pay workers for overtime and sick leave....
They mostly employed African migrant workers and underpaid them by a cumulative of nearly Sh. 725,000 ($5,000)....
"Our investigating indicates that Swahili Village DC and its executives, Kevin Onyona and Emad Shoeb, persistently and systematically failed to pay hundreds of hard-working restaurant workers the wages, tips, and benefits they were legally entitled to receive, violating the basic wage, overtime, sick leave, and record-keeping rules that all District employers are required to follow." Washington DC AG Brian Schwalb said in a statement...
The lawsuit further claims that Onyona and Shoeb failed to keep regular payroll records, keeping employees in the dark about how they pay was calculated...
The paid also failed to give sick leave to employees, reprimanding them for missing work due to illness...