Federal Court: Lawsuit against Forest City Ratner and BUILD to Move Forward

June 21, 2012

June 19, 2012, Brooklyn, NY—A federal judge in Brooklyn has decided that a group of residents represented by South Brooklyn Legal Services may move forward on their lawsuit against Forest City Ratner
and related entities based on unpaid wages and broken promises. In a
19-page decision, Judge John Gleeson of the Eastern District of New York
held that the plaintiffs, participants in a sham job training program
created by the Atlantic Yards developers and Brooklyn United for
Innovative Development (BUILD), may proceed on their central claims
against the defendants.


Coverage: New York Law Journal (subscription only), Park Slope Patch 


The decision affirms that the plaintiffs properly stated claims for unpaid wages under federal and state labor laws against all the defendants, who plaintiffs allege jointly operated the Pre-Apprenticeship Training Program (PATP). Judge Gleeson determined that although the trainees were not employees in the ordinary sense, they may still be entitled to be paid for their work. The judge held that all the defendants, including Bruce Ratner, may be liable for unpaid wages.(Read more about the lawsuit.)

The court also found that the defendants may have engaged in deceptive acts or practices in violation of the New York General Business Law. The court based this determination on the allegations that the defendants recruited a large number of potential trainees with misleading promises of union membership and jobs. According to the decision, this constitutes a “sufficient public impact” to show a broad effect on consumers at large.

While some claims were dismissed as to certain defendants, the judge affirmed all the key aspects of the legal basis for the plaintiffs’ lawsuit. The defendants argued that the developers could not be held to promises to deliver union jobs. However, Judge Gleeson stated: “I cannot conclude . . . that it was unreasonable, as a matter of law, for the Plaintiffs to rely on promises of union membership and jobs made to a small number of PATP participants by a major real estate enterprise that would employ tens of thousands of union workers.”

For more information, please contact South Brooklyn Legal Services’ Nicole Salk at 718-237-5544 or Sarah Dranoff at 718-237-5578.

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