Mistreating Customers and Workers
For a long time, the corporation
that stood out as America’s worst employer was Walmart, given its reputation
for shortchanging workers on pay, engaging in discriminatory practices and ruthlessly
fighting union organizing drives.
Today, Amazon.com seems to be trying to take over that title, at least for its blue-collar workforce.
Today, Amazon.com seems to be trying to take over that title, at least for its blue-collar workforce.
Yet when we look at the corporations that have been paying the most penalties for workplace abuses, there is another contender for the top, or really the bottom, spot among U.S. employers: Bank of America.
In Big Business Bias, a report just published by the Corporate Research Project of Good Jobs First, we found that BofA has paid more in damages, settlements and fines in workplace discrimination and harassment cases than any other large for-profit corporation.
In Grand Theft Paycheck, a report we published last year on wage theft, BofA ranked
third (after Walmart and FedEx) in total penalties paid in private wage and
hour lawsuits and cases brought by the U.S. Labor Department.
BofA’s position in these tallies is
to a significant extent the result of cases brought against its subsidiary
Merrill Lynch, which the federal government pressured it to acquire during the
financial meltdown in 2008. Merrill accounts for 95 percent of the $210 million
in penalties BofA has paid in discrimination cases and more than one-quarter of
the $381 million paid in wage theft cases.
Merrill brought with it problems beyond questionable personnel practices. In 1998 it
had to pay $400 million to settle charges that it helped push Orange County,
California into bankruptcy with reckless investment advice.
In 2002 it agreed to pay $100 million to settle charges that its analysts skewed their advice to promote the firm’s investment banking business (plus another $100 million the following year). In 2003 it paid $80 million to settle allegations relating to dealings with Enron.
In 2002 it agreed to pay $100 million to settle charges that its analysts skewed their advice to promote the firm’s investment banking business (plus another $100 million the following year). In 2003 it paid $80 million to settle allegations relating to dealings with Enron.
This track record was similar to that of BofA before the merger. For example, in 1998 the bank paid $187 million to settle allegations that in its role as bond trustee for the California state government it misappropriated funds, overcharged for services and destroyed evidence of its misdeeds.
BofA later paid to settle lawsuits concerning its dealings with Enron ($69 million) and another corporate criminal, WorldCom ($460 million).
In the wake of the financial crisis,
BofA had to enter into several multi-billion-dollar settlements concerning the
sale of toxic securities and various mortgage abuses. It is for all these
reasons that BofA tops the Violation Tracker ranking of the most penalized parent companies, with payouts
of more than $58 billion.
BofA is not unique in this respect.
Another major bank is also one of the ten most penalized corporations overall
as well as high on the lists of those with the most penalties related to
workplace discrimination and wage theft.
That bank is Wells Fargo, which ranks sixth on the Violation Tracker list with over $14 billion in penalties, ninth in the discrimination tally with $68 million and fourth in the wage theft tally with $205 million.
That bank is Wells Fargo, which ranks sixth on the Violation Tracker list with over $14 billion in penalties, ninth in the discrimination tally with $68 million and fourth in the wage theft tally with $205 million.
Wells Fargo, of course, is notorious for creating millions of bogus accounts to generate
illicit fees and other deceptive practices. Last year, the Federal Reserve took
the unprecedented step of barring the bank from growing any larger until it cleaned
up its act. The agency also announced that the bank had been pressured to
replace four members of its board of directors.
Bank of America and Wells Fargo
demonstrate all too clearly that mistreatment of customers can go hand-in-hand
with mistreatment of workers.