Video Transcription
He and others would be making $13 an hour. That was the labor market opinion as well, the government paperwork.
He says that was just paperwork though. In reality, they were paid pure commission, he says, which amounted to as little as $2 an hour.
And on top of that, he says, they were made to live with their supervisor.
He and four other workers, rent was then deducted from their pay, and arbitrary fines were deducted too, like $100 from looking at their phone while they were at work.
Bottom line, he says, they were either paid nothing or sometimes ended up indebted to this employer.