Operator of Tacoma ICE detention center ordered to pay $23.2 million over unfair labor practices
The company in charge of operating a Tacoma ICE detention center will have to pay out $23.2 million, stemming from a lawsuit over the facilitys alleged unfair labor practices.
Nearly $6 million of that money will need to be surrendered by the GEO Group which is contracted by ICE to run the facility as unjust enrichment. Another $17.3 million will be paid to over 10,000 people detained there for back wages owed.
The lawsuit dates back to a complaint filed against the private contractor in 2017, claiming that it had been unjustly enriching itself on the labor of detainees, and pushing for detainees to be paid minimum wage for work performed at the facility. Previously, they had been paid $1 a day for cooking, cleaning, and laundry services, despite minimum wage at the time being $12 an hour.
The Tacoma facility is Washingtons only private detention center, having been at the center of more than one controversy in recent years. That includes an incident in April 2020, where 50 inmates at the facility participated in a hunger strike, spelling out the letters SOS in the yard of the detention center with their bodies. That marked the third hunger strike in as many weeks that month, including 300 people who participated during the first week of April.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/operator-of-tacoma-ice-detention-center-ordered-to-pay-23-2-million-over-unfair-labor-practices/ar-AAQk7vf