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State fines subcontractor $143,000 for underpayment on UH-Hilo project

The state fined Tradewind Plastering and Drywall Inc. $143,000 for underpaying construction workers on a building project at the University of Hawaii at Hilo.

Tradewind was a subcontractor of Jacobsen Construction Co. on the UH-Hilo College of Hawaiian Language Building project and misclassified workers as lower-paid apprentices, violating the state’s wage law for public works construction projects.

Workers were underpaid by $130,367, according to the Department of Labor & Industrial Relations, which assessed the firm another $13,037 in penalties for misclassifying the employees.

“Our state prevailing wage law intends that all construction contractors bid on a level playing field with regard to labor costs,” DLIR Director Linda Chu Takayama said today in a news release. “Bids are to be won because of better, more efficient contracting methods, rather than by pushing down the standard of living for Hawaii’s workers.”

DLIR recently recovered wages for hair salon workers who weren’t paid for their work while classified as apprentices. In another case involving the Holiday Inn Express at the Maile Sky Court, workers were misclassified as independent contractors and did not receive the required employee protections and benefits.

3 responses to “State fines subcontractor $143,000 for underpayment on UH-Hilo project”

  1. islandsun says:

    What else is new contractors all are greedy and never tell the truth.

    • kuroiwaj says:

      IslandSun, most of the time, contractors who don’t classify and/or underpay construction workers according to the State Law are non-union/not signatory contractors who intend to take advantage of workers.

  2. Commando1 says:

    How come the GC is not under question? Aren’t they suppose to review and request certified payroll? Suspsious all the way around.

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