KathleenSebelius

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Jury Awards $240 Million for Long-Term Abuse of Workers with Intellectual Disabilities by Henry's Turkey Service | May 1 2013

Posted on 6:02 AM by Unknown
PRESS RELEASE 5-1-13
U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
Historic Verdict Against Henry's Turkey Service for Men Subjected to Verbal and Physical Harassment, Housed in Substandard Facilities, Denied Medical Care
WASHINGTON - A Davenport, Iowa jury today awarded the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) damages totaling $240 million - the largest verdict in the federal agency's history - for disability discrimination and severe abuse.

The jury agreed with the EEOC that Hill County Farms, doing business as Henry's Turkey Service subjected a group of 32 men with intellectual disabilities to severe abuse and discrimination for a period between 2007 and 2009, after 20 years of similar mistreatment.

"The verdict sends an important message that the conduct that occurred here is intolerable in this nation, and hopefully will help to restore dignity and acknowledge the humanity of the workers who were mistreated for so many years," said EEOC Chair Jacqueline A. Berrien.

The company is based in Goldthwaite, Texas, but the work and abuse occurred in West Liberty and Atalissa, Iowa. The jury awarded each of the men $2 million in punitive damages and $5.5 million in compensatory damages. This verdict follows a September 2012 order from the district court judge that Henry's Turkey pay the men $1.3 million for unlawful disability-based wage discrimination, thus making the total judgment $241.3 million.

EEOC presented evidence to the jury that Henry's Turkey exploited these workers, whose jobs involved eviscerating turkeys, because their intellectual disabilities made them particularly vulnerable and unaware of the extent to which their legal rights were being denied. The affected men lived in Muscatine County, Iowa, where they worked for 20 years as part of a contract between Henry's Turkey and West Liberty Foods, an Iowa turkey processing plant.

"This historic verdict marks one of the EEOC's finest moments in its ongoing efforts to combat employment discrimination, especially discrimination against vulnerable and historically underserved populations," said EEOC General Counsel David Lopez. "The fact that the jury rendered the largest verdict ever obtained by the EEOC says volumes about the severity of the violation and it illustrates this agency's resolve to vindicate the rights of all discrimination victims."

Specifically, the EEOC presented evidence that for years and years the owners and staffers of Henry's Turkey subjected the workers to abusive verbal and physical harassment; restricted their freedom of movement; and imposed other harsh terms and conditions of employment such as requiring them to live in deplorable and sub-standard living conditions, and failing to provide adequate medical care when needed.

Verbal abuses included frequently referring to the workers as "retarded," "dumb ass" and "stupid." Class members reported acts of physical abuse including hitting, kicking, at least one case of handcuffing, and forcing the disabled workers to carry heavy weights as punishment. The Henry's Turkey supervisors, also the workers' purported caretakers, were often dismissive of complaints of injuries or pain.

"These men suffered isolation and exploitation for many years, while their employer cruelly consumed the fruits of their labor," said Robert A. Canino, regional attorney of the EEOC's Dallas District Office, which tried the case. "Our society has come a long way in learning how persons with intellectual disabilities should be fully integrated into the mainstream workplace, without having to compromise their human dignity."

Such abuse violated the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), which prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability, including intellectual disabilities, in terms and conditions of employment and wages and bars disability-based harassment. The EEOC filed its lawsuit (No. 3:11-cv-00041-CRW -TJS, in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Iowa) after first attempting to settle the case through its conciliation process.

"The ADA provided us with a law enforcement tool to ensure fair treatment for persons with physical and mental disabilities," said Canino. He told the jury that Henry's Turkey treated the men "like property." He added, "The jury heard the human stories of these men, understood what they suffered, and valued their experiences in reaching their verdict." Canino said the men "feel humiliation and suffer distress from their experiences even to this day." Canino urged the jury to think of the "broken lives of 32 hard-working but vulnerable intellectually disabled men" who were employees of Henry's Turkey.

In support of its case and to detail the human story for each of the victims at trial, the EEOC relied upon a nationally recognized expert in the field of care and treatment of persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities, Dr. Sue Gant. Social workers from the Iowa Department of Human Services, former DHS manager Denise Gonzalez, and the staff of a disability support services provider, Exceptional Persons Inc. of Waterloo, Iowa, also provided in-depth personal perspectives with regard to the victims and the nature of the abuses suffered.

In addition to the EEOC's disability-based harassment and discrimination verdict, the EEOC earlier won a $1.3 million wage discrimination judgment when Senior U.S. District Court Judge Charles R. Wolle found that, rather than the total of $65 dollars per month Henry's Turkey paid to the disabled workers while contracted to work on an evisceration line at the plant, the employees should have been compensated at the average wage of $11-12 per hour, reflecting pay typically earned by workers without intellectual disabilities who performed the same or similar work. The EEOC's wage claims for each worker ranged from $28,000 to $45,000 in lost income over the course of their last two years before the Henry's Turkey Service operation was shut down in February 2009.

Protecting vulnerable workers from disparate pay, harassment, and other discriminatory policies is one of the priorities identified in the EEOC's Strategic Enforcement Plan (SEP).

The EEOC enforces the nation's laws prohibiting employment discrimination. Further information about the EEOC is available at www.eeoc.gov.

http://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/newsroom/release/5-1-13b.cfm

# # #

RELATED POSTS :
Intellectually Disabled Workers Awarded $1.3M for Pay Discrimination by Henry's Turkey Service | Sept 2012 CLICK HERE




Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • PEORIA, IL Event Helps Veterans Find One-Stop Shop Assistance
    PEORIA - Veterans trickled through a room at the Peoria Illinois Department of Employment Security Wednesday getting help on everything from...
  • Chicago Department of Family and Support Services Did Not Always Charge Allowable Costs to the Community Services Block Grant - Recovery Act Program
    as posted at 'Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Summary Under the American Recovery and Rei...
  • U.S. Access Board Releases Proposed Guidelines for Passenger Vessels - submit comments within 90 days
    The U.S. Access Board has released for public comment proposed guidelines for passenger vessels. Developed under the Americans with Disabili...
  • Illinois Senate Passes Medical Marijuana Legislation, will Gov Quinn sign..
    SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) – Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn must decide if he will sign a measure allowing the use of marijuana for medical purposes a...
  • NATIONAL HIV TESTING DAY IS COMING - June 27, 2013
    National HIV Testing Day (NHTD) was first observed on June 27, 2005. This day was established as an annual observance to promote HIV testin...
  • Kenya's mental hospital drugs, confines patients; may have led to the recent escape of 40 patients
    By TOM ODULA ; Associated Press ; May 24, 2013 NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - Patients at Kenya's only psychiatric hospital are often confined a...
  • U.S. Labor Regulations likely will aid Vets, Disabled, unions
    By SAM HANANEL Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) - With Thomas Perez now confirmed as head of the Labor Department, the agency is expected t...
  • RTA, CTA, PACE, Metra - 2013 Disabled and Senior Free Ride Transit Programs
    Fare Programs Benefit Access Program (Formerly Circuit Ride Free Program) Ventra is Coming... Starting in 2013, the CTA and Pace are transi...
  • Illinois Governor Quinn Addresses “Going Home” Rally; Increasing Community Care & Reducing the Number of Outdated, Expensive Institutions
    Press Release April 10, 2013 Governor Pat Quinn State of Illinois Governor Quinn Addresses “Going Home” Rally Governor’s Rebalancing Initiat...
  • Illinois Murray Developmental Center - temporary restraining halted closing May 2013
    The Associated Press; May 30, 2013 CHICAGO (AP) - A federal judge has agreed to enter a temporary restraining order to halt the movement of...

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (500)
    • ►  September (24)
    • ►  August (106)
    • ►  July (86)
    • ►  June (71)
    • ▼  May (84)
      • ALERT: Anti-hunger advocates in Illinois are warni...
      • EQUIP FOR EQUALITY CALLS FOR ILLINOIS GOV QUINN TO...
      • AAPD’s anti-bullying campaign - Half way there : A...
      • Illinois Murray Developmental Center - temporary r...
      • U.S. Access Board Advisory Committee on Medical Di...
      • State of Illinois 23rd Anniversary ADA Celebraton:...
      • Illinois Council of the Blind ICB Summer Fest Fund...
      • U.S. Access Board Webinar: Accessible Fire Alarm S...
      • Illinois Senate Bill 26 - MEDICAID-HEALTH BENEFITS...
      • Veterans disability benefits backlog : Law schools...
      • Illinois 2013 Veterans benefits guide released by ...
      • Human potential wasted when people merely ‘exist’ ...
      • Tony Paulauski: Consequences to delaying Murray De...
      • Kenya's mental hospital drugs, confines patients; ...
      • Monday, May 27 is Memorial Day, please observe a m...
      • Illinois history of warehousing disabled; Illinois...
      • Chicago arts groups want to help the blind see and...
      • Marijuana tied to better blood sugar control - The...
      • ALERT: Jury Duty Scam Hits Illinois Residents | Ma...
      • Illinois Governor Quinn Honors Achievements in Hir...
      • RTA (Chicago) Seniors and People With Disabilities...
      • Illinois legislation to hire more disabled people...
      • DISABILITY COMMUNITY URGES SWIFT VOTE OF TOM PEREZ...
      • U.S. Access Board Forms Advisory Committee on Rail...
      • The Autistic Brain by Dr Temple Grandin - The Coff...
      • Disaster Distress Helpline Provides Crisis Counsel...
      • Mental Health First Aid Classes - Community Counse...
      • Chevrolet auto dealership apologizes for ‘Short Bu...
      • ILLINOIS ABILITIES: TOPSoccer program gives young ...
      • Chicago Police warn Chicago Transit Authority (CTA...
      • Exercise and Depression - HHS HealthBeat
      • U.S. poor are moving to nation's suburbs - Report ...
      • Nationwide Call to ACTION on the Disability Treaty
      • Support The Arc and Receive a Great Magazine
      • ALERT: UPDATED : STOP Efforts to Warehouse Illinoi...
      • Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disord...
      • GREATER ILLINOIS CHAPTER OF THE NATIONAL MULTIPLE ...
      • Onward and Upward By Guest Blogger, Stephen Wample...
      • Harris Bank (Chicago) to Pay $400,000 to Resolve E...
      • Illinois Senate Passes Medical Marijuana Legislati...
      • EEOC Issues Revised Publications on the Employment...
      • Camp Little Giant 2013 registration is under way; ...
      • Advocates For Disabled Fight Illinois Special Ed R...
      • Abilities Expo - Chicago - June 28-30, 2013 : Peop...
      • Chicago Loop : Elderly man robbed at CTA Blue Line...
      • Twenty-Four Charged as Part of Nationwide Coordin...
      • Illinois Gov Quinn signs The Employment First Act ...
      • Illinois 'Caregiver's' Union asks for higher wage...
      • Paratransit and/or Dial-A-Ride Travel & People wit...
      • Chicago Mass public school closures spark civil ri...
      • Seeing-Eye Cat assists mans best (visually impaire...
      • ALERT: Help protect inclusion and supports for stu...
      • Anti-Bullying Campaign 2013 - American Association...
      • Vietnam veteran's still battling : getting disabil...
      • Illinois : New online map tracks uninsured
      • The Rich hire Disabled tour guides so there kids c...
      • Examining the Accessibility of Overseas Facilities...
      • Social Audio Sharing Website for Visually Impaired
      • Closed-Captioning Glasses Help Deaf Go Out To The ...
      • ALERT Help Stop SB 45 in Illinois - People with D...
      • Chicagoan Michael Jones Refuses to Let Disability ...
      • Illinois Lt. Gov supports medical marijuana
      • Governor Quinn Announces $10 Million for Community...
      • New group helps young people with disabilities nav...
      • The Sparkle Effect helps students create cheerlead...
      • Chicago area: Some Taxi Drivers With Checkered Pa...
      • Children with mental health disabilities, Signific...
      • Opinions : Google car could help the blind in Chicago
      • Hike fines for bicyclists who break traffic laws -...
      • ALERT: Con artists impersonating ComEd workers - M...
      • New Architectural Barriers Act (ABA), Complaint Fo...
      • Chicago parents defend CHSAS at ISBE meeting; chil...
      • Action Alert: Prevent Source of Income Discriminat...
      • Chicago's 45th Annual Special Olympics Spring Game...
      • Taste of Chicago July 10 to 14, 2013 - Accessibili...
      • Comments on the U.S. Access Board’s Guidelines for...
      • Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) Seeks Two New Memb...
      • Disabled Sports USA & Great Lakes Regional Games &...
      • 2013 'The Case for Inclusion' Report - Intellectua...
      • Jury Awards $240 Million for Long-Term Abuse of Wo...
      • HUD Reminds Housing Providers of Obligation to All...
      • NYC SEEING-EYE HUMANS FOR WALKING TEXTERS : video ...
      • Preparing for an IEP meeting
      • U.S. Senators disturbed over VA disability claim b...
    • ►  April (58)
    • ►  March (71)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile