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Minnesota Recovers $1.28M in Back Wages and Liquidated Damages for Construction Workers

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Summary

The Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry (DLI) recovered $1.28 million in back wages and liquidated damages for 26 construction workers following an investigation into Property Maintenance & Construction LLC, Property Maintenance and Construction Inc. (PMC), and Advantage Construction Inc. The investigation uncovered wage and hour violations across 19 construction projects in the Twin Cities metropolitan area, including the Viking Lakes project in Eagan, Minnesota, during the audit period of March 4, 2019 through June 5, 2022. Consent orders resolve a contested case filed at the Court of Administrative Hearings on December 19, 2023, with Advantage paying back wages and PMC paying liquidated damages.

Why this matters

Construction contractors and subcontractors operating in Minnesota should review their wage and hour practices, particularly regarding overtime calculations and timely payment of all wages earned. The $1.28 million recovery involved violations spanning over three years (March 2019 – June 2022) across multiple projects, demonstrating that DLI's audit period can be lengthy. While the Construction Worker Wage Protection Act (effective August 1, 2023) did not apply to this case, it now extends liability upstream to prime contractors for their subcontractors' wage obligations.

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GovPing monitors MN DLI Labor News for new labor & employment regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 6 changes logged to date.

What changed

DLI's investigation found that 26 workers were denied overtime and other wages across 19 construction projects in the Twin Cities metropolitan area. The case was resolved via consent orders at the Court of Administrative Hearings, with Advantage Construction (the first-tier subcontractor) paying back wages and PMC paying liquidated damages. Construction industry employers should note that Minnesota's Construction Worker Wage Protection Act, effective August 1, 2023, now holds contractors liable for unpaid wages owed by subcontractors — providing an additional enforcement avenue that was not available during the period covered by this investigation.

Archived snapshot

Apr 28, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

DLI recovers $1.28 million in back wages and liquidated damages for construction workers

April 27, 2026
DLI resolves investigation involving widespread wage and hour violations on 19 construction projects, including the Viking Lakes project in Eagan, Minnesota

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Construction contractors agree to pay $1.28 million in back wages and liquidated damages after the Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry (DLI) found that 26 workers were denied overtime and other wages for work performed on various construction projects, including the Viking Lakes project in Eagan, Minnesota. This recovery to the workers is the result of an investigation DLI initiated against Property Maintenance & Construction LLC and Property Maintenance and Construction Inc. (PMC), and against Advantage Construction Inc., that concluded with consent orders. It is the largest recovery in a wage and hour violation investigation by DLI.

DLI’s investigation of PMC and Advantage uncovered widespread wage and hour violations on 19 separate construction projects across the Twin Cities metropolitan area during its investigative audit period of March 4, 2019, through June 5, 2022. Advantage — the first-tier subcontractor that hired PMC — agreed to pay back wages, while PMC agreed to pay liquidated damages. The consent orders resolve a contested case DLI filed against PMC and Advantage at the Court of Administrative Hearings on Dec. 19, 2023.

“These cases are complex, but we were committed to recovering every dime owed to these impacted workers,” said DLI Commissioner Nicole Blissenbach. “As a result of these consent orders, 26 workers will receive back wages that are years overdue – most workers were shorted tens of thousands of dollars. These efforts not only support workers who are victims of wage theft, they help to ensure a level playing field for law-abiding employers in the construction industry.”

Minnesota has robust laws to protect workers from wage theft and to make them whole when employers commit wage theft, including the Minnesota Wage Theft Prevention Act. To address wage theft in the construction industry, the Minnesota Legislature passed the Construction Worker Wage Protection Act to hold contractors liable for unpaid wages and benefits owed to construction workers by their subcontractors. The law took effect Aug. 1, 2023, so it did not apply in this case, but now provides an additional avenue of relief for workers.

Workers and employers can learn more about their rights and responsibilities at dli.mn.gov/laborlaw. To ask questions or report a potential violation, contact DLI’s Labor Standards Division at 651-284-5075 or dli.laborstandards@state.mn.us.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
MN DLI
Published
April 27th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Employers Construction firms
Industry sector
2361 Construction
Activity scope
Wage recovery Wage theft investigation Consent orders
Geographic scope
US-MN US-MN

Taxonomy

Primary area
Employment & Labor
Operational domain
Compliance
Compliance frameworks
Dodd-Frank
Topics
Consumer Protection Consumer Finance

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