Showing posts with label A.G. Underwood Announces $282. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A.G. Underwood Announces $282. Show all posts

Thursday, June 28, 2018

A.G. Underwood Announces $282,000 Settlement With Reality Television Production Company That Underpaid Workers


Former Employees of Original Media LLC – Former Producer of “Swamp People” and “Miami Ink” – Will Receive $282,000 in Restitution for Unpaid Overtime; Company Also Reforming Business Practices
Settlement is Third in AG’s Ongoing Investigation into Television Production Industry to Protect Workers’ Rights to Proper Overtime Pay 
  Attorney General Barbara D. Underwood announced a settlement resolving an investigation into Original Media LLC, which produced “Swamp People,” “Miami Ink,” and other reality television programs, for failing to pay scores of employees required overtime. Following the Attorney General Office’s investigation, Truly Original LLC – the new entity from a merger between Original Media and True Entertainment – has agreed to pay $282,000 in restitution to employees who did not receive required overtime payments for having worked well over 40 hours per week. 
“Employees deserve to be fairly compensated for their long hours,” said Attorney General Underwood. “My office will continue to enforce overtime laws and ensure employees are being treated justly in the television production industry and across New York.”
The settlement follows the Attorney General’s $411,000 settlement with True Entertainment LLC, now part of Truly Original LLC – which produced “Real Housewives of Atlanta”– and the Attorney General’s $226,000 settlement with Sharp Entertainment, which produces “Man v. Food.”
In total, the Attorney General has won back $919,000 for television production workers — part of over $30 million recovered for more than 21,000 workers since 2012 in wage theft cases.  
The Attorney General’s investigation found that beginning in January 2009, Original Media misclassified employees – including Production Assistants and Associate Producers – as exempt from overtime pay. As a result, many of these workers were entitled to overtime pay but never received it. In addition to failing to compensate their employees properly, Original Media did not keep legally required records listing the total hours employees worked and did not provide employees with accurate statements of the hours they worked during each pay period. The Attorney General’s investigation found that Original Media’s Production Assistants and Associate Producers frequently worked at least 50 hours per week and sometimes as many as 80 hours per week without receiving the overtime premiums the law requires.
Lowell PetersonExecutive Director of the Writers Guild of America, East, said, “As part of our ongoing nonfiction television organizing campaign, the Writers Guild of America, East has negotiated collective bargaining agreements that protect the pay and benefits of hundreds of writer-producers. We are pleased the Attorney General has taken action and won real justice for the Associate Producers employed by Original Media / Truly Original, people who were deprived of overtime pay despite their grueling work schedules. WGAE contracts require employers to pay overtime to APs; Original and True are non-union. Writer-producers working together, combined with vigorous law enforcement by the AG, are sending a powerful message to nonfiction TV production companies: wage theft is not the way to do business.”
Overtime laws exist to discourage employers from assigning very long workweeks, to provide some compensation for people who have to work very long hours, and to spread employment throughout the workforce by incentivizing companies to hire additional employees rather than overworking a more limited staff.
While there are exemptions from state and federal overtime coverage, including for certain high-level employees who fall into certain categories of job duties based on state and federal law, none of those exemptions applied to the workers covered by the settlement. Production Assistants and Associate Producers for Original Media had a range of duties, including crowd control, making travel arrangements, logging footage, and obtaining releases from people appearing on camera. Based on their duties, these employees were legally entitled to overtime. Original Media violated the New York Labor Law by not paying employees accordingly.
As True Entertainment and Original Media have previously merged to form Truly Original LLC, Truly Original has agreed to and already begun implementing several reforms of its business practices, including the following:
  • Notifying all Production Assistants and Associate Producers in writing that they are classified and will be treated as overtime-eligible, non-exempt employees who are entitled to be paid at one and one-half times their regular rates for hours worked in excess of 40 in any work week.
  • Giving all employees true and accurate wage statements listing the amount of regular and overtime hours worked by employees.
  • Updating their employee handbook to include information about overtime pay eligibility.
  • Training current and newly hired human resources staff, the payroll department, and supervisory personnel about legal requirements for paying overtime and maintaining payroll records. 
The settlement funds will be distributed to Production Assistants, Associate Producers, and workers who performed equivalent tasks for Original Media. Truly Original must also now analyze the job duties of workers in the Producer job title who earn below a certain amount to determine whether those workers are entitled to overtime.