McDonald's foreign workers call it 'slavery' - Action News
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EdmontonGo Public

McDonald's foreign workers call it 'slavery'

Foreign workers recruited from Belize are accusing McDonalds Canada of treating them like slaves,' by effectively forcing them to share an expensive apartment then deducting almost half their take-home pay as rent.

Belizian temporary foreign workers docked pay for rent in corporate apartment

McDonald's foreign workers call it 'slavery'

10 years ago
Duration 2:53
Foreign workers recruited from Belize are accusing McDonalds Canada of treating them like "slaves."

Foreign workers recruited from Belize are accusing McDonalds Canada of treating them like "slaves," by effectively forcing them to share an expensive apartment then deducting almost half their take-home pay asrent.

When we arrived at the airport, they said, We already have an apartment for you,so at that point we already know we dont have a choice of where to live, said JaimeMontero, who came to Edmonton with four others in Septemberto work at McDonalds.

"We had to live there. We were told this is what we are doing," said another worker who didn't want to be named because he still works for McDonald's.

The Belizeans said their dream of making good money in Canada to send to their families quickly shattered. Instead, they pocketed less than $800 per month which they said was barely enough to live on.

The Belizians worked at McDonald's locations in south Edmonton and said it took them more than an hour to get to work by public transit. (CBC)

You work for us now,so we are your owners. Its like that, you know, said Montero. We felt like slaves. They just brought us and threw us on the side.

Records from three employeesshow they made $11 an hour working at various McDonalds locations and the company took $280 from their pay for rent, bi-weekly. Their remaining take-home pay for the same pay periods was roughly $350.

[The apartment lease] contracts are signed by McDonalds. All of our bills utility bills were billed [to us] under the name of McDonalds, said Montero.

They brought us here and they are this big huge corporation. We felt that we didnt have a chance to even voice our opinion to thembecause they had brought us here so they could ship us back whenever they wanted to," said Montero. "It was like modern day slavery."

No choice but to pay

McDonalds housed them in a penthouse apartment in downtown Edmonton, even though they worked on the southern outskirts of the city. The corporation signed a six-month lease, which the workers said they were expected to honouras tenants.

The apartment rented by McDonald's is at the top of a downtown highrise. Records suggest the corporation charged the workers $600 more to live there than what it paid the landlord for rent. (CBC)

It was too far from workand it was very expensive, said Montero, who said it took him an hour and a half to get to work by public transit.

They actually said even if we leave the apartment and go rent another apartment, that McDonalds would still deduct the rent from our salary, said the other worker.

Since recent Go Public reports about McDonalds practices with foreign workers, they said the corporation required all staff to sign an agreement, stipulating they would not speak to the media.

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McDonalds fired Montero in November, after he said managers accused him of complaining online about the companyand intimidating other workers, which he and the other Belizeans insistedis not true.

It was very unfair the way they did it...this was such a blow to me, said Montero. He was also evicted from the apartment. He still has a work permit, but hasnt been able to find another job.

I even slept once outside in the cold. Then I found out about homeless shelters and I stayed out at the homeless shelters, he said.

Instead of making money here in Canada my family have had to send money.

The rental contracts show McDonalds paid $2,359 per monthto rent the suite in the Boardwalk building. The corporation didnt pay utilities or other extra costs.

McDonald's has several corporate owned restaurants in Edmonton, and is advertising for more workers on the foreign worker recruitment site. (CBC)

Five workers paying $280 bi-weekly works out to $3,030 per month. That suggests McDonalds charged them $600 more for rent than what it paid.Go Public pointed out that discrepancy toMcDonald's, but receivedno explanation.

The lease expired at the end of February and the Belizeans have since found a more affordable apartment.

Its not easy and its not cheap to be here, said Montero.

Government investigating

Employment Minister Jason Kenney told Go Public if the workers felt coerced to rent a place they didnt want to live in, that would warrant investigation.

No one, including an employer, can force anyone to live in a particular place. People are free to choose where they live, said Kenney, whose department said it is looking into this case.

Employment Minister Jason Kenney said if the newcomers felt coerced into living where they didn't want to, that warrants investigation. (CBC)

It doesnt matter whether they are a Canadian citizen, permanent resident or temporary resident, they have full mobility rights. And if any employer is somehow using ways to coerce people to stay in a particular place that would be illegal.

Montero and the others were recruited in Belize by Actyl, a company that brings in workers from several countries for McDonalds in Western Canada.

He said Actyls president Linda West made promises to workers that didnt come true.

Its like a big scam they were doing in Belizejust hiring a bunch of Belizeans to come to Canada, said Montero.

Actylhas told Go Public it is a no fee agency. However, receipts show the new workers did pay for visa processing andmedical fees. The workers also said theyalso paid bus fare to the Cancun airport and other expenses, all totalling $600Cdn each.

According to the workers,West told them McDonalds would reimburse them for all of that once they were in Canada a claim West denies.

Promises broken, workers say

What she was saying was so sweet to us, said the unnamed worker.

The Belizeans said McDonald's never did pay them back.The employment ministersaid most other employers do cover all the foreign workers costs.

The general practice as I understand it is that employers bringing folks in from abroad do reimburse them for the cost of their work permitsand we do require that the employer pays for the travel costs, saidKenney.

The Belizeans said West also promised they would make a lot of their money working overtime, butonce they were in Canada, McDonalds said there would be none of that.

We were more excited because of the overtime,which was promised at $16.50 [an]hour...so we werent worrying much about the regular pay, said Montero.

McDonalds [said later] it does not give overtime to foreigners.

CBC News has confirmed with multiple sources that NDP MLA Jinny Sims is set to announce her candidacy for the Mayor of Surrey on June 8, 2022. (CBC)

The job offers they signed in Belize list the possibility of overtime pay. Theemployment contract actually states McDonalds will not provide housing.

In Belize, there was nothing in the contract about where we would live, said the unnamed worker.

When Go Public asked Linda West if she promised the workers overtime and reimbursement for costs, she answered, "Those statements are completely false."

Montero said they feel ripped off by the whole experience.

I was making more money in Belize [working construction] than I made here in McDonalds in Canada," he said.

NDP employment critic Jinny Sims saidin light of all the recent Go Public reports about McDonalds practices, the government should suspend all pending foreign work permits for its restaurants.

They have demonstrated that they are absolutely abusing this program, said Sims.

To say you are living in company quarters and we are going to deduct your rent and if you dare say you dont like where we put you were going to charge you anyway...that seems like indentured labour to me.

McDonald's Canada spokesperson Richard Ellis confirmed the terms of the apartment rental arrangement. He alsoresponded to all of this by pointing outMonterois disgruntled.

"He was let go after only two months on the job and within his probationary period," said Ellis. "Respectfully, I suggest the input of an obviously disgruntled former employee is hardly the type of information you should be using to base your report."

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