Support for LAist comes from
Local and national news, NPR, things to do, food recommendations and guides to Los Angeles, Orange County and the Inland Empire
Stay Connected
Listen

The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • The L.A. Report
    Listen 8:57
    Dodgers meltdown, CA GOP convention, remembering Vicky Tafoya — Sunday Edition
Jump to a story
  • New center to address wage theft, trafficking
    A 65-year-old Thai woman with long dark hair and glasses stands at a podium outside while three other women of Asian descent flank her.
    Nantha Jaknang, 65, is a former El Monte garment worker who spoke at the grand opening of the new Thai Workers' Center.

    Topline:

    A first-of-its kind center in the U.S. just opened in L.A. and will cater to exploited Thai workers, who advocates say disproportionately face wage theft and trafficking. Workers will learn about their labor rights and how to organize from Thai-speaking staff and volunteers.

    Why it matters: Industries with high concentrations of Thai workers such as restaurants, spas and agriculture are rife with wage theft. Thais have been part of the country’s largest labor trafficking and sex trafficking cases.

    The backstory: The opening of the Thai Workers' Center on Wednesday coincided with the 28th anniversary of the El Monte Thai Garment Slavery case. In 1995, federal agents raided a sweat shop in El Monte where 72 Thai workers were imprisoned and forced to work more than 16 hours a day. The case drew national attention and led to legislation to protect workers from wage theft and sweatshop conditions.

    What's next: The new center expects to serve about 500 Thai workers a year, but will also assist any low-wage worker.

    In the mid-1990s, a landmark case involving El Monte garment workers brought modern-day slavery in the U.S. into glaring focus. Federal agents raided a locked sweatshop compound a half hour’s drive outside Los Angeles to free 72 Thai immigrants who’d been working more than 16 hours a day.

    Nearly 30 years later, the mass exploitation of Thai immigrants continues.

    This week, the Thai Community Development Center opened a first-of-its-kind facility in the U.S. just blocks from the Thai Town business district in Hollywood, where workers will learn about labor rights and how to organize from Thai-speaking staff and volunteers.

    The majority of Thai immigrants continues to work in the service sector. These immigrants are treated as unskilled labor, making them more vulnerable to exploitation, said Chancee Martorell, executive director of the Thai CDC. Her organization has worked on cases involving more than 1,000 trafficked Thai workers.

    “Despite being a small immigrant community in this country, Thais are disproportionately affected by the scourge of human trafficking,” Martorell said at the center’s grand opening on Wednesday.

    A group of about a dozen people, mostly middle-aged Asian women, gaze around a room and talk amongst themselves.
    The former El Monte garment workers get a tour of the Second Home co-working space in Hollywood, which will house the new Thai Worker Center.
    (
    Josie Huang/LAist
    )

    Martorell noted Thais have been part of the country’s largest labor and sex trafficking cases. Meanwhile, industries with high concentrations of Thai workers, such as restaurants, spas and agriculture, are rife with wage theft. Earlier this year, the U.S. Department of Labor recovered $1.65 million in back wages and liquidated damages from the owner of the Thai restaurant chain Ocha Classic.

    The center’s grand opening coincided with the 28th anniversary of the El Monte case, drawing county and state officials who were in office when the case broke, as well as more than a dozen of the El Monte garment workers, including 65-year-old Nantha Jaknang.

    Jaknang and the other workers, mostly women, had been paid by the cents for each piece they sewed while trapped in a sweatshop working up to 22 hours a day.

    “A Thai worker center like this is the change we've longed for for a long time," Jaknang said in Thai as Martorell interpreted. “We will rise above adversity weaving a future where workers’ dignity is honored.”

    With the help of advocates such as Martorell and a young lawyer named Julie Su, who is now the country’s acting labor secretary, the El Monte workers won more than $4 million in settlements against B.U.M. International, Mervyn's, Montgomery Ward and others.

    The Thai Workers' Center expects to assist about 500 people a year, operating out of rented rooms at the co-working complex Second Home that will serve as a satellite office of the Thai CDC.

    Directing attorney Panida Rzonca said Thai CDC has been primarily working with restaurant workers, but will increase outreach to massage industry workers through LINE, the messaging app of choice among Thais.

    “A lot of it does rely on social media,” said Rzonca, whose business card includes her LINE ID. “After we make direct outreach in person, we're also going to help them come in so they can benefit from our services.”

    A white-haired Asian man hugs a woman (back to camera) with a curly brown ponytail.
    Paul Chang, who coordinates human trafficking cases for the U.S. Department of Labor, reunited with garment workers he assisted on the El Monte case.
    (
    Josie Huang/LAist
    )

    On Tuesday, the former El Monte garment workers were given a tour of Second Home’s open-concept work spaces and courtyard, where professionals hunched over their laptops.

    Most clients are expected to be Thai, but the center is open to all low-wage workers and will collaborate with the Koreatown Immigrant Workers Alliance and the Pilipino Workers Center.

    “The center will transcend ethnic lines and organize workers across ethnic lines and service industries,” Martorell said.

    L.A. County Supervisor Hilda Solis was a state senator representing El Monte at the time the slavery case broke and worked to pass legislation requiring a code of conduct and third-party monitoring in the garment industry to eliminate sweatshop practices. Nevertheless, unscrupulous employers continue to abuse workers, said Solis, also a former U.S. labor secretary.

    “They may drive nicer cars or have a different sign on the shop or their factory,” Solis said. “But nonetheless, we still see wage theft occurring. We still see people being paid under the table, still being paid piecemeal.”

    Funding support for the center is coming from the California Community Foundation and the Liberty Hill Foundation.

Loading...