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Minnesota faces a severe affordable housing shortage, with low-cost rentals down 25% over the last decade and home prices doubling from 2012 to 2022. As a result, state and local governments set aside a record $1 billion for housing affordability in 2023.
Sadly, many of the new housing projects intended to address this crisis are built on the backs of vulnerable workers who earn too little to live in the homes they build.
A recent report by North Star Policy Action exposed the troubling reality of taxpayer-funded construction practices that exploit immigrant and at-risk workers, and revealed a disheartening truth: Public financing often flows to private, for-profit housing developers who employ contractors with a track record of labor violations.
While government support is crucial for affordable housing, it has also fueled abusive labor practices in construction. Wage theft, payroll fraud, lack of safety standards and other forms of exploitation remain persistent problems in Minnesota’s construction industry, and troubling allegations have surfaced of construction firms cutting corners and abusing workers on projects in Rochester, Eagan and Minneapolis.
Arturo Hernandez was a victim of labor abuses while employed by Painting America, a drywall and painting contractor. In 2019, he testified before the Minnesota House of Representatives Labor Committee stating that his foreman insisted on paying him in drugs, claiming it would make him more money if he sold them. Hernandez refused, and reported the incident to Painting America, as well as to government oversight agencies. To this day, no action has been taken against Painting America or the contractor, and Arturo was never compensated for his three weeks of work.
Many workers face similar exploitation, especially those who don’t fully understand their rights because of language barriers. In another case, government investigations found that Absolute Drywall, a construction company based in Lakeville, deprived workers of more than $126,000 in wages, violated child labor laws, misclassified workers, and submitted false and misleading information during the course of an investigation.