ICE contractor worth billions is fighting to pay detainee workers $1-a-day
1 week, 2 days ago

ICE contractor worth billions is fighting to pay detainee workers $1-a-day

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ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. If following state minimum wages becomes the norm, Trump’s immigration crackdown could cost the country even more than it otherwise would — unless private detention centers absorb the cost themselves or decide to cut back on cleaning, which Tacoma detainees have already accused GEO of doing. The company was also ordered to hand over $17 million in back wages, plus $6 million for “unjust enrichment.” The combined penalties amounted to less than 1 percent of GEO’s total revenues in 2024. As judges have noted, GEO’s contract with ICE states that the prison company must follow “all applicable federal, state, and local laws and standards,” including “labor laws and codes.” It also holds that GEO must pay detainees at least $1 a day for the Voluntary Work Program. The federal government “made a deliberate choice to dictate to GEO the minimum rate,” the 9th Circuit wrote in its most recent decision, but “it also made a deliberate choice not to dictate to GEO a maximum rate.” Conditions in Tacoma are worsening as the number of detainees rises, according to Maru Mora Villalpando, founder of the activist group La Resistencia.

History of this topic

‘Slavery wages’ prompt hunger strike at ICE detention facilities
2 years ago
Company halts work program instead of upping detainee pay
3 years, 4 months ago
Company halts work program instead of upping detainee pay
3 years, 4 months ago
Thousands of immigrants detained by America claim they were forced into labour, a violation of anti-slavery laws
8 years ago
Private Prison Company Forced Immigrants To Work For Free, Lawsuit Says
9 years, 8 months ago

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