Massachusetts 2023-2024 Regular Session

Massachusetts Senate Bill S1148 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 02/16/2023

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SENATE DOCKET, NO. 1544       FILED ON: 1/19/2023
SENATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 1148
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
_________________
PRESENTED BY:
Nick Collins
_________________
To the Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in General
Court assembled:
The undersigned legislators and/or citizens respectfully petition for the adoption of the accompanying bill:
An Act relative to wage theft.
_______________
PETITION OF:
NAME:DISTRICT/ADDRESS :Nick CollinsFirst Suffolk 1 of 8
SENATE DOCKET, NO. 1544       FILED ON: 1/19/2023
SENATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 1148
By Mr. Collins, a petition (accompanied by bill, Senate, No. 1148) of Nick Collins for legislation 
relative to wage theft.  Labor and Workforce Development.
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
_______________
In the One Hundred and Ninety-Third General Court
(2023-2024)
_______________
An Act relative to wage theft.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority 
of the same, as follows:
1 Add a new section 150D to the general laws at chapter 149, which shall read as follows: 
2Section 150D Construction Industry Private Attorney General Action 
3 (a) Whereas, wage law enforcement and honest bid competition are compelling state 
4interest its police powers for enforcement shall include, but not be limited to, this section: 
5 •Construction Industry employment makes more difficult protecting employees 
6 against Wage Non-Payment and competing employers against unfair competition based 
7on Wage Non-payment, as employees and employers navigate during single pay-periods multiple 
8construction sites throughout the Commonwealth and neighboring or other states; 
9 •Most construction firms employ fewer than twelve employees inhibiting employees 
10similarly situated to obtain class certification under court rules;  2 of 8
11 •An employer’s failure to comply with wage payment and related law provides 
12competitive advantage that illegally shaves costs resulting in illegally deflated bids to compete 
13against honest employers, and such illegal conduct harms competition including by way of 
14workers compensation insurance premium evasion –affecting insurance rates and causes payroll 
15tax loss to the Commonwealth increasing the public’s tax burdens; and 
16 •Construction Industry higher tier contractors often contract with the lowest price bidder; 
17and 
18 •The public is harmed when higher tier contractors subcontract to business enterprises or 
19lower tier subcontractors that cheat to compete by failing to fully The public is harmed when 
20employees lack proper wages on payday, including but not limited to the difficulty for an unpaid 
21employee to meet his or her financial obligations owed to others in the stream of commerce or 
22marketplace causing public harms that include, for example, unpaid rent, mortgages, medical 
23bills and related insurance payments, automobile expenses, and other common living expenses; 
24and 
25 •The public is benefited when: 
26 i.Construction competition among bidders is based on honest bid competition 
27 as honesty promotes competition; and 
28 ii.An Interested Party pursues wage law compliance on behalf of the 
29 Commonwealth as 	it best ensures non-complying construction employers will experience 
30exposure and the consequences when they do not pay their statutory and contractual wage related 
31obligations.  3 of 8
32 (b) Definitions, for this section 150D: 
33 “Construction Industry” shall have the broadest meaning possible to include but not be 
34limited to drivers delivering construction material to construction sites for employers who 
35primarily deliver such materials, residential contracting services referenced in chapter 142A, and 
36any labor performed on private projects that are of a similar type of labor performed on public 
37projects governed by section 27. 
38 “Construction Industry Employer” means any person who or entity that, within the 5-year 
39period preceding the date an action under this section was filed: i) contracted to perform work, 
40regardless of contract or subcontract tier level, on a project governed by section 27 of this 
41chapter after having submitted a bid for same and who employed employees who performed 
42labor under that contract; or ii) contracted to perform construction work located in the 
43Commonwealth in excess of $500,000, regardless of contract or subcontract tier level, and 
44employed Construction Industry employees who performed labor under that contract. 
45 “Interested Party” means any one or more of the following: 
46 1.Any Construction Industry Employer; 
47 2.Any trustee acting on behalf of an organization or trust established for the purposes of 
48the Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978, 29 U.S.C. section 175a, where contributions 
49are made by at least five Construction Industry Employers; 
50 3.Any labor organization which has as members, or is authorized to represent, employees 
51and which exists in whole or part for the purposes of negotiating with Construction Industry  4 of 8
52Employers concerning wages, hours, or terms and conditions of employment of such employer’s 
53employees; or 
54 4.Any organization that represents five or more member firms that are Construction 
55 Industry Employers that employed labor on public works project governed by section 27 
56of this chapter or 5. Any Affected Employee. 
57 “Wage Non-payment” means the failure to pay a wage owed to an Affected Employee in 
58violation of any of the following statutes or contract provision: sections 27, 148, 148A, 148B, or 
59150 of the general laws at chapter 149; or section 1A of the general laws at chapter 151; or any 
60contract provision that required the payment of wages on a construction project in accord with 
61rates required under section 27 of chapter 149. 
62 “Affected Employee” means any Construction Industry employee or former employee 
63who was employed by an individual or firm named as a defendant employer in an action filed 
64under this section where such employee remains due from such defendant any Wage Non-
65payment whatsoever, regardless as to where or the type of labor was performed, provided that a 
66substantial part of the Wage Non-payment owed was earned by the employee while performing 
67Construction Industry labor as employee of such defendant. 
68 (c) Civil Action: In addition to all common law, contract, or other remedies available at 
69law, an Interested Party alleging facts that show probable cause that an employer has engaged in 
70or caused a Wage Non-payment shall have standing and be entitled to bring an action in the 
71name of and on behalf of the Commonwealth and the public, for the use and benefit of same, 
72against such employer to recover damages and penalties stated in this section.  5 of 8
73 A civil action filed under this section shall be deemed a private attorney general action. 
74The representative nature of such an action on behalf of the Commonwealth is not waivable and 
75shall not be deemed a class action, so long as there is at least a common question of law or fact 
76among at least two Affected Employees. Regardless as to whether any Affected Employee’s 
77claim must be arbitrated, the representative action on behalf of the Commonwealth cannot be 
78waived or compelled to arbitration. Further, the Interested Party bringing such representative 
79claim shall not have to wait for an arbitration decision or award before proceeding in court under 
80this section. 
81 The Interested Party filing an action under this section shall provide a copy of the 
82complaint for the purposes of notice to the attorneys general, within 10 business days of the 
83filing. If the Interested Party prevails in the action, the court shall award treble the Wage Non-
84payment damages, as liquidated damages, to any Affected Employee who has, following a court 
85approved notice of same, responded to the court within 90 calendar days, affirming an interest in 
86a recovery, which notice shall be interpreted liberally to encourage Affected Employees to 
87respond and affirm such an interest. 
88 A twenty percent surcharge tax on the total amount awarded by the court-including on 
89attorney fees, in addition to other usual income taxes due, on this recovery shall be paid into a 
90wage enforcement fund established by the attorney general. Such fund shall be used by the 
91attorney general to enforce wage laws, educate the public, particularly employers and employees, 
92about wage law obligations and rights, and when the attorney general deems the fund is 
93sufficiently funded, to advance some payment by loan pending an action under this section and 
94upon the attorney general’s sole and exclusive discretion, to an Affected Employee showing 
95urgent need to obtain unpaid wages to pay housing, heat, or food costs.  6 of 8
96 In addition, the Interested Party who prevails under this section shall be entitled to 
97recover for the Commonwealth penalties, and Wage Non-payments as restitution incurred by 
98each other Affected Employee who did not respond affirming an interest, as follows: For each 
99violation of law, the court shall order the defendant employer to pay into the wage enforcement 
100fund (i) a penalty in the amount of $50 per violation per pay-period for each unresponsive 
101Affected Employee; and (ii) an amount, payable into the wage enforcement fund, equal to single 
102Wage Non-payment damages, as restitution, incurred 	for all Wage Non-payments that the 
103defendant employer should have paid to each Affected Employee who did not respond timely to 
104a court approved notice affirming an interest in a recovery; the attorney general shall hold in 
105escrow such amounts until the original statute of limitation period applicable against the 
106defendant employer to expire on such restitution obtained in the event the Affected Employee 
107reconsiders and seeks the restitution. But, after such limitations period has expired with no such 
108employee claim, the amount shall escheat to the wage enforcement fund. 
109 A defendant employer ordered to pay into the wage enforcement fund as single Wage-
110Nonpayment damages restitution incurred for labor performed by an Affected Employee who 
111failed to affirm an interest in a recovery shall be entitled to a set-off of such amount paid against 
112a future Wage Non-payment or other wage action filed by or on behalf of such Affected 
113Employee, but no set-off shall apply to the $50 per pay period penalty. In addition, the Interested 
114Party may also bring on behalf of the Commonwealth a claim for injunctive and declaratory 
115relief. An Interested Party that prevails in any action filed under this section shall be awarded the 
116costs of the litigation and reasonable attorney fees. 
117 An action filed under this section shall be filed within limitation period of the Wage Non- 
118payment at issue, except that where a Wage Non-payment also includes a violation of contract  7 of 8
119the Interested Party shall be a third-party beneficiary of the contract, including any public 
120procurement contract, and recovery applicable to that portion of the action shall include amounts 
121due within the limitations period set forth under section 2 of the general laws at chapter 260; for 
122such contract action filed beyond the limitation period of the Wage Non-payment at issue 
123liquidated damages shall not be awarded unless the contract recites otherwise and the court may 
124award fees for such contract provision portion of the action in accord with the contract or its 
125discretion.
126 On the trial no defense for failure to pay as required, other than the attachment of wages 
127by trustee process or a valid assignment thereof or a valid set-off against the same, or the absence 
128of the employee from his regular place of labor at the time of payment, or an actual tender to 
129such employee at the time of payment of the wages so earned by him, shall be valid. The 
130defendant shall not set up as a defense a payment of wages made or offered after the action under 
131this section has been filed.
132 Attorney General Intervention. As a matter of right the attorney general may intervene as 
133a plaintiff at any time, including post trial, by notice of same filed with the court or may file an 
134appearance to be served all pleadings and discovery for monitoring. In the event that she 
135intervenes, the attorney general shall thenceforth represent the Commonwealth as plaintiff, not 
136the Interested Party. If the Interested Party shall retain party status, if it so chooses, for purposes 
137that may include and not be limited to providing opportunity to the Interested Party to raise its 
138interests or concerns including regarding any settlement proposed or to recover, if appropriate, 
139its reasonable costs and fees incurred. The attorney general shall not settle the matter with the 
140defendant without the participation in all settlement communications with the Interested Party  8 of 8
141who retained party status and without first obtaining such Interested Party’s informed consent 
142which shall not be reasonably withheld. 
143 Nothing in this section shall be deemed as an exclusive remedy and this section shall not 
144affect the rights of the attorney general or any other person to pursue additional or other remedies 
145available by way of other laws or available actions.