California Workers File a Class Action Lawsuit Against Cannabis Companies
/Casey Denning and Natalia Cole filed a California lawsuit suing Cannabis harvesting company Loud Buddha LLC and Pura Cali Management Corp, a cultivation contractor associated with Loud Buddha. The companies allegedly violated provisions of the FLSA (Fair Labor Standards Act) and California labor law. According to the lawsuit, the companies forced workers to work long hours in an oppressive workplace with no overtime pay or meal breaks. They also allegedly failed to provide accurate wage statements. The plaintiffs filed on their own behalf as well as others in similarly situated positions with the cannabis companies.
According to Plaintiffs: Workers’ Duties Were Dangerous & Included:
Cultivating marijuana plants
Harvesting marijuana plants
Bucking marijuana plants (removing buds and stems)
Hanging marijuana plants
Placing marijuana plants in large commercial freezers to be transported
According to the lawsuit, over 50 workers completed these job duties to total multiple tons of cannabis each year from the Pura Cali marijuana farm.
The Complaint Against Loud Buddha & Pura Cali: What Were the Alleged Violations?
1. Employees forced to work 12-hour days every day of the week.
2. Workers were expected to stay on the job site in a remote location, sleeping on cots. Workers were threatened with discipline if they failed to comply.
3. Employers failed to keep track of workers’ time accurately.
4. Employers failed to provide required meal breaks and rest breaks.
5. Workers were not reimbursed for work expenses (i.e., meals, travel, etc.)
6. Employers allegedly failed to provide overtime pay, paying workers $15/hour in cash.
7. Time records kept by the employer were allegedly unreliable and inaccurate – depriving workers of earned wages and failing to comply with FLSA record-keeping requirements.
Workers employed by the cannabis company are often referred to as “trimmigrants.” The trimmigrants are typically young and often undocumented seasonal workers. The abusive, arguably dangerous conditions endured by the trimmigrants working in Northern California’s Emerald Triangle have been going on for years. The chronicles of their situation include tales of murder, sexual assault, and disappearances.
If you have questions about how to identify employment law violations or if you need to file a California class-action lawsuit, please get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in any one of various law firm offices located in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.