A Florida-based concrete and masonry contractor and one of its subtrades are among six organizations cited by The New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development (NJDOL) for misclassfying workers on a project in the northern state.
Kiko Construction LLC from Kissimmee did caulking work on masonry walls for concrete and masonry contractor Carol Concrete LLC of Lakeland for work at Brookfield Properties, in Monroe Township, NJ.
The NJDOL issued stop work orders to Kiko as well as four others from North Carolina and Georgia, the agency said in a Feb. 15 statement.
Kiko and the other subcontractors – Best Hernandez Construction LLC from Charlotte, NC, 5 Star Reinforcement LLC of Carrollton, GA., who erected steel framework; Elite Pro Rebar LLC of Stockbridge, GA; who also installed metal rebar – were each cited for misclassifying workers, and found to owe a total of $29,658 in back wages.
Each subcontractor was also assessed a misclassification penalty equaling five percent of the workers’ gross earnings for the prior 12 months, totaling $5,954, to be paid to the affected workers.
This penalty was implemented as part of a bill package signed into law by New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy in January 2020 to combat the illegal practice of misclassification.
“Misclassification not only costs our state’s workforce billions of dollars in vital funding to critical worker lifelines like unemployment insurance, it strips workers of their rights to these benefits entirely, including unemployment, overtime, earned sick leave, and minimum wage,” said Assistant Commissioner of Wage and Hour and Contract Compliance Joseph Petrecca. “New Jersey has worked hard to make our state a great place to work and do business, and our goal is to ensure every worker doing a job in our state gets the benefits to which they are entitled.”
The stop-work order issued to Carol Concrete was lifted after an audit determined the misclassified workers were employed by the subcontractors and each subcontractor took responsibility for their workers. However, per N.J.S.A 34:11-67.1 which was just recently enacted, Carol Concrete may be held jointly liable for the misclassified workers, should their subcontractors fail to satisfy the Division’s assessments,.
In addition, the subcontractors were assessed a total of more than $42,000 in penalties and fees, excluding the misclassification penalty.
The general contractor, ARCO Design/Build Industrial Philadelphia, a division of Arco Design/Build Companies Inc., with offices in King of Prussia, Pa. and 31 other locations around the country, was not cited.
Referrals to the NJDOL’s Division of Workers’ Compensation are pending to verify the companies have the proper Workers’ Compensation Insurance, the NJDOL statement says.