Starting from next month, Shenzhen will launch a three-month
campaign against unpaid wages with more rigorous measures following
last year's successful crackdown on back pay owed by employers,
according to the labor and insurance bureau Saturday.
A revised regulation on the payment of wages will come into
effect by the end of the year requiring certain enterprises,
starting from construction companies in the first phase, to set
aside wages under special accounts.
Other measures targeting the construction industry, the industry
with the worst record in unpaid wages, include improved
subcontracting procedures for government projects and
disqualification from contracting projects for companies with a
poor back-pay record.
The bureau will set up an "express channel" to expedite
arbitrations on cases related to unpaid wages. It will also form a
special arbitration team to serve migrant workers and reduce or
even exempt legal fees incurred by migrant workers.
In 2005, about half of the 9,570 cases relating to violations of
labor and insurance regulations in the city dealt with unpaid wages
by enterprises. The trend was curbed in the first half of this year
thanks to the "zero back pay" campaign kicked off by the bureau in
October 2005.
From January to June, the back pay insurance fund under the
bureau paid 1.96 million yuan (US$245,000) to victimized workers, a
huge drop compared to last year's 29.9 million yuan.
Zhang Ming, head of the supervising team of the wage payment
watchdog bureau, contributed the decrease in back pay cases to last
year's "zero back pay" campaign and imprisonment of eight company
owners for withholding wages earlier this year.
To protect themselves better, the migrant workers should learn
more about their rights, said Xu Shaoying, vice director general of
the bureau, in a talk with migrant workers in Xincheng Building on
Saturday.
The talk was held in eight spots citywide Saturday. A large
number of questions were raised about payment for overtime work,
according to the bureau.
Some enterprises failed to pay the workers 1.5 times the basic
salary for overtime work on weekdays and two times for weekends
while some calculated the overtime payment wrongly on basic
salaries lower than the city's minimum salary standard.
(Shenzhen Daily August 7, 2006)