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Goodwill exploits workers with penny wages [English Subtitles]

  • 0:00 - 0:04
    Brian Williams
    It's a part of American life, when something is no longer useful to you,
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    you give it to Goodwill. You drop it in the Goodwill box,
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    perhaps in the supermarket parking lot near you,
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    and you've then done something good, with something you no longer consider good.
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    You may know that Goodwill donation centers employ disabled workers,
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    but you may not realize that some of those workers are legally exempt from minimum wage protection.
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    That means that some end up making just pennies per hour.
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    It is legal, but tonight, Harry Smith takes on the question of fairness.
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    Harry Smith:
    Goodwill, a place where you feel good about leaving your old clothes,
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    a place where you feel good about shopping in a tough economy.
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    Goodwill's mission is give jobs to people who are down on their luck, or have a disability.
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    Goodwill does a lot of good, no question about it.
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    But in back rooms like this one, in Great Falls, Montana,
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    out of sight of donors and shoppers,
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    there is something going on that many disabled people do not feel so good about.
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    People with disabilties working for less than the federal minimum wage of
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    of $7.25 an hour. There are even places in America where Goodwill workers earn as little as $0.22 an hour.
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    And because of a loophole in the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938,
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    it's all perfectly legal
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    Voice:
    That's ridiculous.
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    Harry Smith: Harold and Sheila Leigland have been married for more than twenty years.
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    Both are blind and both have college degrees.
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    Sheila worked at the Goodwill facility in Great Falls, Montana, earning about $3.50 an hour for four years.
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    She says she quit last summer when they lowered her wage to $2.75 an hour.
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    Sheila Leigland:
    At $2.75, it would barely cover my cost of getting to work. I wouldn't make any money.
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    Harry Smith:
    They call the facility "the plant," and Harold still works there.
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    It operates what's called a "sheltered workshop."
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    Here the disabled get virtually guaranteed employment, but they are not guaranteed minimum wage.
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    And that doesn't matter to some of the workers. Jeremy Davidson loves it here.
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    Harry Smith:
    You love it here?
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    Jeremey Davidson:
    I love it here, more than the world, more than the world yes. I also love, um, NASCAR, but this and NASCAR are my two favorite things in life.
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    Harry Smith: But for others, it is a dead end, a job of last resort in a world in which there are few options.
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    What's your wage right now?
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    Harold Leigland:
    $5.46 an hour.
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    Harry Smith:
    $5.46 an hour?
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    Harold Leigland:
    And that could change in a few months.
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    It could change because sheltered workshop wages are determined by a speed test every six months.
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    Goodwill staff use a stop watch to see how many items of clothing
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    Harold can hang in a minute.
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    Harold Leigland:
    You're allowed two mistakes, and then anything else after that
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    your quality is considered poor.
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    So, your perecentage of wage goes down.
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    We talked with three advocates for the disabled,
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    all of whom are disabled themselves.
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    I wouldn't pay anyone a sub minimum wage because I'm not willing to tell people day after day,
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    week after week, month after month, and year after year that they are not worth it.
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    Dr. Mark Mauer, President of the National Association of the Blind,
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    has been leading the fight to ban sheltered workshops altogether.
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    The sheletered workshop system takes people and systematically tells them
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    they're not as good as the rest of the workforce.
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    We found Department of Labor records showing hourly wages for Goodwill works in Pennslyvania
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    as low as $0.22 an hour, $0.38, $0.41, $0.44, the list of wages under $2.00 goes on and on.
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    But that's only part of the story.
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    While some Goodwill workers are making pennies,
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    their bosses are faring a bit better.
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    A half-dozen regional Goodwill CEO's make $400,000 a year or more.
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    Many others make nearly that much.
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    In 2011, the CEO of Goodwill Industries of Southern California took home $1.1 million dollars in salary
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    and deferred compensation.
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    As someone who is an advocate for the disabled, how does that sit with you?
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    Woman:
    Is my head spinning right now? Because that's how it sits with me.
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    Cathy Steffke once worked at a Goodwill.
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    She's a disability rights activist, based in Wisconsin.
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    Cathy Steffke:
    How can anybody go into human services thinking they're going to get rich.
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    And do so, o-on, on, on the labor of the most vulnerable citizens we have.
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    How can that be fair or, or ethical?
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    Harry Smith:
    What's more, Goodwill grosses almost $5 billion dollars a year.
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    Advocates are outraged that a tax exempt, non profit that gets hundreds of millions of dollars in government funding,
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    does not pay some of its workers minimum wage.
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    Does it feel like exploitation to you?
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    Man:
    It is exploitation.
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    It is unquestionably, and clearly exploitation.
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    Ari Ne'eman is President of the Autistic Self Advocacy Network.
  • 5:08 - 5:10
    Ari Ne'eman:
    They're able to collect charitable donations,
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    they're able to present themselves as doing good work,
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    and yet they don't have to do right by their workers.
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    Harry Smith:
    Ari, let me ask you this:
  • 5:20 - 5:27
    If I'm an executive for Goodwill, one of my arguments is, "I'm paying wages that are commensurate with the ability
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    "of the people who—," you smile, "with the people I have in my workshop".
  • 5:33 - 5:42
    Ari Ne'eman:
    I think, that if you had a person with a stopwatch, um, standing outside your office on any given day,
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    and assess as compared to some hypothetical, um, other broadcaster,
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    how productive you are,uh, I-I think the result would be somewhat arbitrary.
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    Jim Gibbons, President of Goodwill Industries International, dismisses Goodwill's critics.
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    Jim Gibbons:
    When the elitists, uh, try to define somebody else's success, that that's not only insulting to me
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    in terms of the work that I'm trying to accomplish,
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    but to the individuals who, who have goals that they have established for themselves.
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    Harry Smith:
    So, the people who we've talked to, who say that this is a civil rights issue, you, you would say they're elitist?
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    Jim Gibbons:
    I would say that every individual has a right to define success for themselves.
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    Harry Smith:
    Gibbons, who himself is blind, made more than a half a million dollars in 2011.
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    He insists, Goodwill payscale and sheltered workshops is fair.
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    As I look at some of the hourly wages: $1.00, $1.52, $0.58 an hour, $1.30,
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    this just goes on and on and on.
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    Jim Gibbons:
    You know, Harry, no matter what the person's, uh, issues are,
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    whether it's a disability or anything else, what you see is, uh, that everything is
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    focused on the individual, their goals, their skillsets and their ability.
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    Harry Smith:
    Your regional CEOs, some of them are making a half million dollars or more,
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    how do you justify that disparity?
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    Jim Gibbons:
    I think these leaders are having a big impact in terms of new solutions,
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    in terms of innovation, and in terms of job creation.
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    I hear what you're saying, but I'm looking at a company that makes so much money.
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    Looks to me like you've got the money to pay these people minimum wage.
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    JIm Gibbons:
    The, the, the whole driving force of why Goodwill has such a major impact in the communities that they're a part of
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    is because Goodwills in our history have always been market driven. It really is just that simple.
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    If you don't let that happen, then you're not around for the next day.
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    Harry Smith:
    Gibbons says, with a total workforce of more than a 110,000 people,
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    Goodwill employees between 7 and 8,000 people with disabilities, whose pay, according to the
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    Fair Labor Standards act, can be below minimum wage.
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    He says, Goodwill gives people with the most severe disabiliies an opportunity to work,
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    an opportunity they would not otherwise have.
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    He says that many of the people who make less than minimum wage, the experience of work is
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    more important than the pay they get.
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    It's typically not about their livelyhood, it's about their fullfilment, it's about being a part of something,
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    and it's probably a small part of their overall program.
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    But for Harold and Sheila Leigland, Gibbons words sound out of step with their complaints.
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    They say, they do need the money and they could be productive in their own right with the right job.
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    A job better suited to their abilities.
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    Sheila Leigland:
    I thought that it would be a really good thing if I could answer the phone at the plant,
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    and take messages and deliver messages, but that was poo-pooed.
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    ???:
    It's the obligation of management to figure out how to use people's talents, not the obligation of the worker
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    to fit into some box, that the manager dreams up and says, regardless of your disability, this is your job,
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    and if you're not any good at it, that's your fault not mine.
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    Harry Smith:
    And is that what you feel some of these Goodwills operate?
  • 9:16 - 9:18
    ???:
    It is exactly how they operate.
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    Sheila Leigland:
    It's a question of being able to be treated like a first class citzen in this country,
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    and have the rights of other people to work to obtain the things they need,
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    and to be the people that they can be.
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    It's a civil rights issue for me.
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    Brian Williams:
    Hmm, Harry Smith here with us.
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    You said you set out just to shed light on this, and some of this just don't seem right.
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    Harry Smith:
    Yeah, this is a conversation that has been going on in this community for some time now,
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    and we wanted to, maybe, make the conversation a little bit bigger.
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    And on some levels it's so black and white on all the levels, it certainly is grey,
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    if you're the family member of a disabled person who finds
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    some way to get more self-meaning in their life by being able to get a job in a sheltered workshop
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    that may be really profound and maybe a life changing, and life enhancing experience.
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    But, for these disabled advocates, they say that model is out of date.
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    That goes back to a different time in our country, and it's time to get into the 21st century.
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    Brian Williams:
    Powerful story well told. Thank you pal.
  • 10:22 -
    Harry Smith:
    Thanks for the opportunity.
Title:
Goodwill exploits workers with penny wages [English Subtitles]
Description:

Goodwill pays some disabled workers far less than the minimum wage, while some executives earn hundreds of thousands of dollars.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Captions Requested
Duration:
10:25

English subtitles

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