Current:Home > InvestFeds say 13-year-old girl worked at Hyundai plant in Alabama -Elevate Profit Vision
Feds say 13-year-old girl worked at Hyundai plant in Alabama
View
Date:2025-04-18 12:17:43
The U.S. Department of Labor is suing South Korean auto giant Hyundai Motor Co., an auto parts plant and a recruiting company after finding a 13-year-old girl illegally working on an assembly line in Alabama.
The agency filed a complaint Thursday in U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Alabama to require that Hyundai, SMART Alabama, an auto parts company, and Best Practice Service, a staffing agency, relinquish any profits related to the use of child labor. In the complaint, the Labor Department alleged that all three companies jointly employed the child.
The move comes after federal investigators found a 13-year-old girl working up to 50 to 60 hours a week on a SMART assembly line in Luverne, Alabama, operating machines that turned sheet metal into auto body parts, the Labor Department said. The child worked at the facility, which provides parts to Hyundai Motor Manufacturing Alabama, over a period of six to seven months, and "instead of attending middle school, she worked on an assembly line making parts," the legal document stated.
"A 13-year-old working on an assembly line in the United States of America shocks the conscience," Jessica Looman, the DOL's wage and hour division administrator, said in a statement.
The Korean automaker is liable for repeated child labor violations at SMART Alabama, one of its subsidiaries, between July 11, 2021, through Feb. 1, 2022, according to the department. The child was allegedly dispatched to work at the component parts provider by Best Practice, it said.
According to the complaint, SMART told the staffing firm that "two additional employees were not welcome back at the facility due to their appearance and other physical characteristics, which suggested they were also underage."
"Companies cannot escape liability by blaming suppliers or staffing companies for child labor violations when they are in fact also employers themselves," Seema Nanda, solicitor of the Labor Department said in a news release.
In a statement, Hyundai said it enforces U.S. labor law and expressed disappointment that the Labor Department filed a complaint.
"The use of child labor, and breach of any labor law, is not consistent with the standards and values we hold ourselves to as a company," Hyundai said in a statement. "We worked over many months to thoroughly investigate this issue and took immediate and extensive remedial measures. We presented all of this information to the U.S. Department of Labor in an effort to resolve the matter, even while detailing the reasons why no legal basis existed to impose liability under the circumstances."
"Unfortunately, the Labor Department is seeking to apply an unprecedented legal theory that would unfairly hold Hyundai accountable for the actions of its suppliers and set a concerning precedent for other automotive companies and manufacturers," the company added.
Hyundai said its suppliers immediately ended their relationships with the staffing agencies named in the complaint, conducted a review of its U.S. supplier network and imposed tougher workplace standards. In addition, the company said it is now requiring its suppliers in Alabama to conduct independently verified audits of their operations to ensure they comply with labor laws.
The case marks the first time the Labor Department has sued a major company for allegedly violating child labor law at a subcontractor, and stems from a government probe and separate Reuters report that unveiled widespread and illegal use of migrant child laborers at suppliers of Hyundai in Alabama.
Reuters reported in 2022 that children as young as 12 were working for a Hyundai subsidiary and in other parts suppliers for the company in the Southern state.
The wire service reported on underaged workers at Smart after the brief disappearance in February 2022 of a Guatemalan migrant child from her family's home in Alabama. The 13-year-old girl and two brothers, 12 and 15, worked at the plant in 2022 and were not going to school, sources told Reuters at the time.
The Labor Department in fiscal 2023 investigated 955 cases with child labor violations involving 5,792 kids nationwide, including 502 employed in violation of hazardous occupation standards.
Some minors have suffered serious and fatal injuries on the job, including 16-year-old Michael Schuls, who died after getting pulled into machinery at a Wisconsin sawmill last summer. Another 16-year-old worker also perished last summer after getting caught in a machine at a poultry plant in Mississippi.
Kate GibsonKate Gibson is a reporter for CBS MoneyWatch in New York, where she covers business and consumer finance.
veryGood! (4586)
Related
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- California male nanny sentenced to over 700 years for sexual assaulting, filming young boys
- Nearly 1,000 Rohingya refugees arrive by boat in Indonesia’s Aceh region in one week
- Florida's new high-speed rail linking Miami and Orlando could be blueprint for future travel in U.S.
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Paris Hilton Says She and Britney Spears Created the Selfie 17 Years Ago With Iconic Throwback Photos
- Are Nikki Garcia and Artem Chigvintsev Ready for Baby No. 2? She Says...
- Biden plans to deploy immigration officers to Panama to help screen and deport U.S.-bound migrants, officials say
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- CEO of Fortnite game maker casts Google as a ‘crooked’ bully in testimony during Android app trial
Ranking
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- New York lawmaker accused of rape in lawsuit filed under state’s expiring Adult Survivors Act
- Zach Wilson benched in favor of Tim Boyle, creating murky future with Jets
- Taylor Swift fan dies at Rio concert amid complaints about excessive heat
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Man facing murder charges in disappearance of missing Washington state couple
- Chase Chrisley Debuts New Romance 4 Months After Emmy Medders Breakup
- US auto safety regulators reviewing some Hyundai, Kia recalls
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
2 Backpage execs found guilty on prostitution charges; another convicted of financial crime
Second suspect arrested in Morgan State University shooting
How Mark Wahlberg’s Kids Are Following in His Footsteps
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
2-year-old injured after firing gun he pulled from his mother's purse inside Ohio Walmart
Below Deck Mediterranean Shocker: Stew Natalya Scudder Exits Season 8 Early
New York City’s ban on police chokeholds, diaphragm compression upheld by state’s high court