Worker’s Justice Project Helps Day Laborers Fight for Wages During Pandemic

Emily Drooby

Natacha’s family is struggling to put food on the table and pay their bills. Making it more difficult: the paycheck they’ve been counting, which is two months late.

“Because we haven’t been able to pay the rent, and all of this has affected us,” said Natacha, translated from Spanish.

Natacha and her daughter were at the Briarwood, Queens construction site where her husband —  an undocumented immigrant —  had been working. Due to the family’s status, Currents News is only using first names.

Natacha is demanding her husband’s salary be paid. He is currently the family breadwinner. Natacha lost her job to the pandemic.

Martin, who is also claiming wage theft, said his family is in a similar situation.

“I live off of my job,” he said in Spanish. “So, they were almost throwing me out of the house because I couldn’t pay rent.”

Fighting wage theft as an undocumented worker can be terrifying and sometimes impossible. That’s why they reached out to Worker’s Justice Project for help.

“And I give a lot of thanks to this institution because they’re supporting every single person who is here,” said Natacha.

The Brooklyn-based organization fights for immigrant workers rights. They mostly deal with day laborers and domestic workers who have little to no support, especially since many of their clients are undocumented. They address a wide range of workers’ rights, and wage theft is one of them.

The group is helping Martin, Natacha and eight others with the wage theft allegations they have raised against Madison New York Services, a company that lists demolition and concrete work among their many construction roles.

Worker’s Justice Project organized a protest outside the construction site on Queens Boulavard.

In regards to the accusations, Currents News attempted to speak with a man identified as the owner on the site but he refused to talk. Another man connected with the company also wouldn’t talk.

Currents News also left several telephone messages for the company, but have not heard back.

Glendy Tsitouras of Worker’s Justice Project says the organization has been asking for the payments, which amount to about $10,000, for over a month.

They visited the site a week ago, and were told to come back. Before the protest, they attempted to contact the employer one more time, but he hung up.

Glendy says they’ll be bringing the case to the Attorney General on Friday.

This incident is not an isolated one. Worker’s Justice Project says they’ve seen an increase in wage theft cases since the pandemic started. They have 30 right now, up from 12 in January.

The pandemic has been especially difficult for undocumented families, who can’t benefit from many of the government’s assistance programs like unemployment.

As they’re fighting for workers, they’re also fighting to keep their funding. 80 percent of the funding is through the city’s Day Laborer Workforce Initiative, which is funded through the city’s discretionary budget.

Right now, Worker’s Justice Project is unsure if that money will make it into the new city budget.

Currents News full broadcast for Thurs, 6/25/20 (Catholic news)

Currents News reports secular and religious news from the Catholic perspective.

Some of the top stories on this newscast:

A question of human dignity – undocumented workers say they’re being cheated out of pay.

The COVID crisis is getting worse, infecting more Americans in a single day than ever before.

President Trump is vowing to stop anyone who wants to tear statues down.

The Pittsburgh parish that will respond to the specific needs of Black Catholics. The bishop making it happen is here tonight.

This Catholic Dating Site is Helping Singles Find Love, Even During a Pandemic

By Jessica Easthope

Love is in the airwaves. On CatholicMatch.com, singles who are interested in faith-focused dating can become couples in just a click. That’s how it happened for Tim and Maddie Van Havermaet.

“Clare, she’s been my best friend since college, she signed me up for six months on CatholicMatch,” said Maddie. “She created the whole profile and Timothy was the first person she found.”

Tim and Maddie are coming up on three months as a married couple. Their journey, which started at a Minnesota pizzeria in 2018, seemed like it was hitting a roadblock when the pandemic forced them to cancel their wedding reception, which was supposed to happen on May 30.

“When we are able to have large gatherings again we’ll have a post-wedding reception,” the couple explained.

They let God and their love lead the way. With Pre-Cana complete, Tim and Maddie managed to pull off a 10-person ceremony in church on April 4, during the apex of a global health crisis. It wasn’t easy.

“All of the Minnesota license bureaus in the Twin Cities shut down and we couldn’t get a marriage license, so on a Thursday afternoon, 24 hours before the stay at home order went in place, we drove up to the Stearns County office and got a marriage license at a drive through,” said the Van Havermaets.

Maddie and Tim are one of CatholicMatch.com’s many success stories, but getting married during a pandemic isn’t as challenging as dating during one. But the dating service is giving people hope: that simple download can lead to your soulmate.

“We’re definitely the place for Catholics to meet each other for online dating and we’re really focused on faith-focused dating for Catholic singles,” said Kateri Bean, the content manager for the site.

Kateri got the job at the start of the pandemic, and made it her mission to give singles a safe and fun outlet to start a relationship online.

“We’ve been encouraging people to have fun and get creative with it. Some of the ideas include online extensions like Scener, or inviting other couples to join your video chat so it’s a double date,” she said.

Even in the midst of the pandemic, activity on CatholicMatch is up by nearly 20 percent. Couples can just “click,” and God will take care of the rest.

Brooklyn Jesuit Prep’s Class of 2020 From NET TV Honors the Graduates of 2020.

Brooklyn Jesuit Prep’s Class of 2020 From NET TV Honors the Graduates of 2020. We all know that 2020 has been a challenging year but our elementary school graduating class has risen to the challenge. Many have faced personal hardship and loss in their families and all of them have needed to adapt to remote learning and distance from their friends. This program salutes their accomplishment and ensures this milestone moment of their graduation is recognized throughout the Diocese. Airing all summer long on NET TV! #Classof2020 #BrooklynJesuitPrep

Holy Family’s Class of 2020 from NET TV Honors the Graduates of 2020

Holy Family’s Catholic Academy’s Class of 2020 From NET TV Honors the Graduates of 2020. We all know that 2020 has been a challenging year but our elementary school graduating class has risen to the challenge. Many have faced personal hardship and loss in their families and all of them have needed to adapt to remote learning and distance from their friends. This program salutes their accomplishment and ensures this milestone moment of their graduation is recognized throughout the Diocese. Airing all summer long on NET TV! #Classof2020 #HolyFamily

St Mels Class of 2020 from NET TV Honors the Graduates of 2020

St. Mel’s Catholic Academy’s Class of 2020 From NET TV Honors the Graduates of 2020. We all know that 2020 has been a challenging year but our elementary school graduating class has risen to the challenge. Many have faced personal hardship and loss in their families and all of them have needed to adapt to remote learning and distance from their friends. This program salutes their accomplishment and ensures this milestone moment of their graduation is recognized throughout the Diocese. Airing all summer long on NET TV! #Classof2020 #StMels

Poor Clare Missionary Sisters

The unique story of the Poor Clare Missionary Sisters of Selmar California, an order founded after an apparition of Our Lady of Guadalupe. Joe Estevez interviews some of the nuns and young missionaries about their history and also the important work that they do for the local community.

Personal Parish to Serve the Black Catholic Community Designated in Diocese of Pittsburgh

By Emily Drooby

A personal parish for black Catholics.

Of the idea, Bishop David Zubik of the Diocese of Pittsburgh said, “Black Catholics have particular prayer needs, spiritual needs.”

It’s a church anyone, no matter where they live, can join. A trailblazing idea out of the Diocese of Pittsburgh.

It was born from a listening session held earlier in the year. The Diocese says the change is especially meaningful now, as hundreds of thousands have taken to the streets with demands to stamp out the sin of racism, social unrest from coast to coast in the wake of the deaths of George Floyd, Rayshard Brooks and others.

Bishop Zubik said, “It’s a critical time, I hope that this is a time that we all get it. That we really do have to root out racism which is a sin. And I’m not sure that we have come in a past to a point of being able to emphasis with our Black sisters and brothers.”

For the parish, the Diocese choose St. Benedict the Moor Church, for 130 years the church has had a rich history of ministering to Black Catholics.

“If you’ve ever had a chance to go to St. Benedicts to celebrate the Mass, it’s full of life and sometimes Masses can go on for quite some time. But it’s expressive of the Black culture,” said Bishop Zubik.

It also sits next to Freedom Corner, a civil rights landmark.

Bishop Zubik said, “It stands on the hill that overlooks the city that has to be a constant reminder to us of how important black Catholics are for us as a church.”

The church is named for Benedict the Moor, a 16th century saint born to African slave parents. He became a Franciscan Friar.

Bishop David Zubik will celebrate Mass at the church on July 12th and it will officially become the personal parish for Black Catholics the next day.