Inmates who performed work at a recycling plant in a county jail are not considered employees for the purposes of federal law because their work was rehabilitative in nature, Baltimore County told the Fourth Circuit, asking the court to keep its district court win.
In a filed Monday, the county told the appellate panel that the Maryland district court's decision granting it summary judgment should stay in place, arguing that the inmates' work at the materials recovery facility, or MRF, had a rehabilitative purpose, making them ineligible to earn minimum wage under the Fair Labor Standards Act.
"Plaintiffs ignore that the MRF's focus on revenue as a facility designed to sell recyclables is separate from whether the county intended that the work performed by plaintiffs at the MRF would assist with rehabilitation," the county said.
A group of inmates, who earned $20 a day, urged the Fourth Circuit in their September brief to flip the lower court's decision finding they were not employees under the FLSA, saying that "the purpose of the work was neither rehabilitative nor served any penological purpose."
On the contrary, "the correctional authorities, under pressure from county administrators, abused their custodial authority to make short-term incarcerees available as a cheap source of labor to a sister agency of the county, the Department of Public Works," the inmates said.
A group of civil rights, anti-poverty and employment law groups backed the inmates in September.
The county said Monday that the district court correctly relied on the Fourth Circuit's 1993 decision in when it ruled in its favor, saying that the inmates "incredibly fault" the lower court for doing so.
The Fourth Circuit ruled in Harker that inmate laborers are not entitled to minimum wage or overtime pay under the FLSA if their work has a rehabilitative purpose and if receiving minimum wage wouldn't advance the FLSA's goals.
The county said the inmates are trying to limit the applicability of Harker to those within prison walls, but "ignore this court's recent emphasis that the custodial context is itself inconsistent with the 'traditional employment paradigm' covered by the FLSA, without any regard for the physical location of the work."
That recent reasoning the county pointed to is the Fourth Circuit's 2021 decision in In that decision, a panel found that people detained at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility that Core Civic operated were not employees under the FLSA, in part because they were not like free workers able to quit their jobs and find other ones at will.
The county also said at the summary judgment stage it "undisputedly demonstrated that the overarching purpose of all work details administered by the county's [Department of Corrections] — including the MRF detail — was to prepare inmates for reintegration upon their release."
The inmates worked at the materials recovery facility while remaining in custody of the correctional officers and were unable to negotiate over pay, work schedule or promotions like "a traditional" employer-employee relationship would include, the county said.
The county further argued that considering the inmates employees under federal law "would not vindicate the legislative aims of the FLSA of preventing 'unfair competition'" because the county avoided competition with private recyclers and devoted all revenue to public good, "including the costs of plaintiffs' own incarceration."
Howard Hoffman of Hoffman Employment Law LLC, who is representing the inmates, told 极速赛车 on Tuesday that the county didn't say "anything new [or] interesting" in the brief, adding that "a jury could quite easily conclude" it was trying to compete with other, private operators.
"Baltimore County is the only jurisdiction that we know, in this circuit, who engaged in this practice. But left unchecked, the county's position would create a race to the bottom among nearly every jurisdiction to staff their recycling facilities with inmates," Hoffman said. "This encourages lengthier sentences for minor crimes for first offenders and the deliberate diversion of inmates from private work release to the county's recycling center — representing the perfect conflict of interest which is on display in this case."
Baltimore County declined to comment Tuesday.
The inmates are represented by Howard Hoffman and Jordan Song En Liew of Hoffman Employment Law LLC.
Baltimore County is represented by Jeffrey Johnson and Kraig Long of Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP.
The case is Michael Scott et al. v. Baltimore County, Maryland, case number 23-1731, in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.
--Additional reporting by Caleb Drickey. Editing by Neil Cohen.
Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
极速赛车
|The Practice of Law
Access to Justice
Aerospace & Defense
Appellate
Asset Management
Banking
Bankruptcy
Benefits
California
Cannabis
Capital Markets
Class Action
Colorado
Commercial Contracts
Competition
Compliance
Connecticut
Construction
Consumer Protection
Corporate
Cybersecurity & Privacy
Delaware
Employment
Energy
Environmental
Fintech
Florida
Food & Beverage
Georgia
Government Contracts
Health
Hospitality
Illinois
Immigration
Insurance
Intellectual Property
International Arbitration
International Trade
Legal Ethics
Legal Industry
Life Sciences
Massachusetts
Media & Entertainment
Mergers & Acquisitions
Michigan
Native American
极速赛车 Pulse
|Business of Law
极速赛车 Authority
|Deep News & Analysis
Healthcare Authority
Deals & Corporate Governance Digital Health & Technology Other Policy & ComplianceGlobal
- 极速赛车
- 极速赛车 Pulse
- 极速赛车 Employment Authority
- 极速赛车 Tax Authority
- 极速赛车 Insurance Authority
- 极速赛车 Real Estate Authority
- 极速赛车 Healthcare Authority
- 极速赛车 Bankruptcy Authority
- Products
- 极速赛车 In-Depth
- 极速赛车 Podcasts
- Rankings
- Leaderboard Analytics
- Regional Powerhouses
- 极速赛车's MVPs
- Women in Law Report
- 极速赛车 400
- Diversity Snapshot
- Practice Groups of the Year
- Rising Stars
- Titans of the Plaintiffs Bar
- Sections
- Adv. Search & Platform Tools
- About all sections
- Browse all sections
- Banking
- Bankruptcy
- Class Action
- Competition
- Employment
- Energy
- Expert Analysis
- Insurance
- Intellectual Property
- Product Liability
- Securities
- Beta Tools
- Track docs
- Track attorneys
- Track judges
This article has been saved to your Briefcase
This article has been added to your Saved Articles
Baltimore County Tells 4th Circ. Inmates Aren't Employees
By Irene Spezzamonte | November 21, 2023, 3:35 PM EST · Listen to article