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‘Go back to Haiti!' Florida company pays $1.4 million to end lawsuit over racism

‘Go back to Haiti!' Florida company pays $1.4 million to end lawsuit over racism

Miami Heralda day ago
While a Florida garbage company denies 'intentional wrongdoing,' they're shelling out $1.4 million to settle a lawsuit that alleges management allowed Black and Haitian-American workers to be hit with racist slurs and imagery from co-workers.
Waste Pro of Florida is based out of Longwood, but the accusations in an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawsuit involve what did or didn't happen at Waste Pro's Jacksonville office, 2940 Strickland St. Specifically, the lawsuit in Jacksonville federal court concerns what did and didn't happen to welder Fednol Pierre after he transferred there in October 2021.
The $1.4 million will go to a ground that includes Pierre, 25 co-workers named in the consent decree and any of Waste Pro's Black and/or Haitian-American Jacksonville employees 'who were subjected to a hostile work environment based on their race, color, or national origin, from February 2021 through Dec. 31, 2023.'
The consent decree also requires Waste Pro to hire a racial discrimination expert as a compliance officer to investigate race discrimination complaints and claims of retaliation for such complaints in Waste Pro's Northeast region for the next 18 months and oversee those investigations throughout the company for the next three years.
A statement from Waste Pro corporate communications says:
'Waste Pro has always been committed to fostering a productive and healthy work environment for its employees that is free of harassment and discrimination. This case stems from events alleged to have occurred in 2022, and while Waste Pro did not find evidence of intentional wrongdoing, a settlement was reached to avoid lengthy litigation and refocus on our commitment to our employees and the people we serve.
Waste Pro has proactively enhanced our existing training for all company managers, our internal reporting mechanisms, and our company-wide communication regarding our robust anti-harassment and discrimination policy.'
The consent decree says Waste Pro denies it violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and, officially, admits no liability.
READ MORE: Miami plastic surgery company discriminated against worker with breast cancer, EEOC says
'Go back on the banana boat!'
The lawsuit says Pierre, a certified welder, worked for Waste Pro in Port St. Lucie for two years and three months before transferring to Jacksonville in October 2021. Another welder, the lawsuit said, welcomed him with 'there is no need for you here,' and dropped a racial slur.
This continued over the succeeding days, the EEOC suit said, from two different welders with 'Go back to Haiti, (n-word);' 'Y'all don't belong here;' 'Go back on the banana boat;' 'This is Trump country;' and other pieces of verbal racist aggression.
'The comments and slurs were ubiquitous, frequent, and occurred openly, including in the presence of...a technician, and other similarly aggrieved Black and/or Haitian-American coworkers,' the lawsuit said.
Pierre and a maintenance supervisor told the maintenance manager what was happening and, eventually, an investigation commenced March 29, 2022. After the investigation, the regional human resources manager planned to hold a staff meeting to talk with maintenance workers about race discrimination.
'Before the staff meeting, [Pierre] and another Black employee discovered a stuffed monkey carrying an American flag in Mr. Pierre's work area,' said the lawsuit, although the photo in the lawsuit appears to show a gorilla.
(Images and statements likening Black people to monkeys or gorillas long have been used in attempts to dehumanize Black people.)
The two welders who had been spewing racist epithets at Pierre, the lawsuit said, began retaliating.
They 'refused to communicate with Mr. Pierre about auto-repairs, and they often left him with the least desirable, most difficult welding tasks to complete at night,' the lawsuit said, which also claimed they 'locked the best welding equipment in their personal lockers so that [Pierre] could not access it.'
Believing nothing substantive had been done, Pierre resigned May 12, 2022.
The next day, the lawsuit said, the regional maintenance manager told a maintenance manager 'to incorrectly note in Mr. Pierre's termination paperwork that he was not rehireable because he had twice walked off the job.'
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Trump priorities clear: Derail medical and scientific research, invade MacArthur Park
Trump priorities clear: Derail medical and scientific research, invade MacArthur Park

Los Angeles Times

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Trump priorities clear: Derail medical and scientific research, invade MacArthur Park

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Julio Cesar Chávez Jr. misses court unrelated to ICE arrest, whereabouts unknown
Julio Cesar Chávez Jr. misses court unrelated to ICE arrest, whereabouts unknown

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Julio Cesar Chávez Jr. misses court unrelated to ICE arrest, whereabouts unknown

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What to know about the troops and federal agents in LA's MacArthur Park
What to know about the troops and federal agents in LA's MacArthur Park

Hamilton Spectator

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What to know about the troops and federal agents in LA's MacArthur Park

LOS ANGELES (AP) — U.S. military troops and federal immigration officers made a brief but mighty show of force Monday at a Los Angeles park in a neighborhood dubbed the 'Ellis Island of the West Coast' for its large immigrant population. The operation left local officials and organizers with many questions. Here is a look at what we know. What happened and was anyone arrested? About 90 National Guard troops and dozens of federal officers descended on MacArthur Park in the morning. But it was nearly empty, since word spread of a potential raid. Mayor Karen Bass said she pulled over on her way to City Hall to witness officers on horseback and soldiers in tactical gear walking past a playground as children at a summer day camp were rushed indoors so they would not be traumatized. The troops and officers left after about an hour. The Department of Homeland Security did not say whether anyone was arrested. Associated Press journalists who arrived as the troops and agents entered the park did not see anyone detained. Some activists showed up to take videos and record the scene. When asked about the appearance in MacArthur Park, the DHS said in an email that the agency would not comment on 'ongoing enforcement operations.' The Defense Department referred all questions to DHS. Bass and Gov. Gavin Newsom called it a political stunt and spectacle meant to intimidate the city's immigrant communities. What's the history of MacArthur Park? The park dates back to the late 19th century when the city received a mudhole and trash dump spanning 35 acres in a land swap, according to the Los Angeles Conservancy. After a 'generous application of fertilizer,' it said the area was turned into Westlake Park with a small boating lake. In 1942, the name was changed to MacArthur Park for Army General Douglas MacArthur, who fought in WWII. 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Trump ordered the deployment of about 4,000 California National Guard troops and 800 active duty Marines against the wishes of Newsom in early June to respond to a series of protests against Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids in Los Angeles. The federal troops' domestic deployment has raised multiple legal questions, including whether the administration would seek to employ emergency powers under the Insurrection Act to empower those forces to conduct law enforcement on U.S. soil, which they are not permitted to do except in rare circumstances. The Marines are primarily assigned to protect federal buildings while hundreds of the National Guard troops accompany agents on immigration operations . Newsom has sued the administration over the deployment and the case is ongoing. How did the community react? Immigration advocates urged people to avoid the area before the heavily armed troops and federal officers arrived in armored vehicles. Betsy Bolte, who lives nearby, came to the park after seeing a military-style helicopter circling overhead. She said it was 'gut-wrenching' to witness what appeared to be a federal show of force on the streets of a U.S. city. 'It's terror and, you know, it's ripping the heart and soul out of Los Angeles,' she said. 'I am still in shock, disbelief, and so angry and terrified and heartbroken.' Chris Newman, legal director for the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, said he received a credible tip about the operation Monday. The park is normally busy with families picnicking and vendors hawking food and toys but since federal agents have been making arrests around Los Angeles, Newman said fewer people have been going out. 'The ghost town-ification of LA is haunting, to say the very least,' he said. ____ Watson reported from San Diego. Associated Press journalists Damian Dovarganes and Eugene Garcia in Los Angeles; Sophie Austin in Sacramento, California; Amy Taxin in Santa Ana, California; and Tara Copp in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

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