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A woman walks out of an Adat Shalom Board & Care facility on Kittridge Street in West Hills, CA. on Friday, Jan. 5, 2018. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
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A woman walks with a shopping cart to an Adat Shalom Board & Care facility on Sale Avenue in West Hills, CA. on Friday, Jan. 5, 2018. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
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After emptying trash, a man walks into an Adat Shalom Board & Care facility on Kittridge Street in West Hills, CA. on Friday, Jan. 5, 2018. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
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A woman walks with a shopping cart past an Adat Shalom Board & Care facility on Kittridge Street in West Hills, CA. on Friday, Jan. 5, 2018. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
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A woman walks with a shopping cart past an Adat Shalom Board & Care facility on Kittridge Street in West Hills, CA. on Friday, Jan. 5, 2018. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
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A woman walks into an Adat Shalom Board & Care facility on Kittridge Street in West Hills, CA. on Friday, Jan. 5, 2018. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
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A man helps a family member back out of a gate at an Adat Shalom Board & Care facility on Kittridge Street in West Hills, CA. on Friday, Jan. 5, 2018. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
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In one of Southern California’s largest wage theft cases, the state labor commissioner has assessed a chain of assisted living homes $7 million in back wages and penalties for paying 149 workers as little as $2.40 an hour.
Adat Shalom Board and Care, which operates six homes in the San Fernando Valley residential neighborhood of West Hills, required live-in caregivers to be on-call 24 hours a day, but did not grant them overtime, or provide rest and meal breaks, according to the labor agency citations.
“Adult care facilities require caregivers to work around the clock, making workers in this industry vulnerable to wage theft and exploitation,” said Labor Commissioner Julie A. Su in announcing the case Tuesday.
“The live-in caregivers were responsible for monitoring and caring for elderly residents and hospice patients, many of them suffering from Alzheimer’s or dementia. The caregivers were paid fixed amounts ranging from $1,500 to $1,800 per month, or $2.40 to $2.88 per hour.”
Pay stubs withheld key information such as hourly rate of pay and total number of hours worked, the agency reported.
On behalf of the chain, Encino attorney Patrick White said, “Adat Shalom vehemently denies that it violated any California wage and hour law. The audit conducted by the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement is wrong. The company intends to appeal and vigorously fight the citation.”
Wage theft is rampant in the homecare industry, according to federal and state officials.
In 2015 and 2016 federal officials audited about 50 home-care companies in San Diego and Orange County, some serving the disabled, others serving the elderly. “Almost every single one we looked at had violations,” Rodolfo Cortez, director of the U.S. Labor Department’s Wage and Hour Division’s district office, reported at the time.
Many of the violators are small businesses with two or three homes. But in one 2016 case, federal officials assessed one of Orange County’s largest chains, Buena Park’s Elizabeth Homes Adult Residential Care, $227,000 in back wages and damages to 138 workers at its 18 homes.
The Adat Shalom investigation, which covered the period of July 2014 to July 2017, was launched after a complaint from the Los Angeles-based Pilipino Workers Center. The center runs a telephone hotline where employers and employees can ask questions or have their complaints taken, then handled by the appropriate agencies.
Angelica Reingold, Adat Shalom’s owner, reached by telephone, said almost all of her workers are Filipino and a few are Latino.
About 70 percent of her patients, who live six to a home, are paid by the state of California, through Medi-Cal’s Assisted Living Waiver program. The program is designed to allow low-income seniors and disabled adults to live in home-like settings in residential care facilities, rather than in nursing homes, which have been plagued with abuses.
Reingold declined to elaborate on her attorney’s statement on the citations.
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