Quote:
Originally Posted by freddymo
Administrative Judges aren't IMPARTIAL.
Nobody save a few people very close to the case know the facts.
People employed in the industry realize it's not an 8 hour a day job, no different than an UBER driver expecting to make an hourly wage. The difference is racing lobby has not lobbied well enough to set the standards.
Not sure how a guy can have the most successful operation in NY and not have happy (for the most part) high-quality help that feels good about their compensation? Maybe but unlikely.
Smells like a setup.
Smart people like Brown obviously can make mistakes too, and when you are growing attention to detail other than winning clients and races can wain, but we will see?
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On the issue of worker satisfaction, the complaint was brought by the US Secretary of Labor (unclear if this was based on worker complaints or not). Most of the allegations are a result of poor record keeping by Brown. The DOL then used Brown’s own records to demonstrate that he didn’t pay his employees the proper amounts. The actual backpay awarded was around $1.2 million ($100,000+ in civil penalties, almost $300,000 in liquidated damages.)
The time frame is also over a 32-month period for 150 employees. Do the math and you’ll realize it’s not a huge amount per day for each employee - but it’s a lot of employees over a long time frame.
It doesn’t seem like this was a mistake by Brown. It seems like it’s industry-wide practice but the federal DOL has decided to crack down on it.