Labatt Romulo suspended an agency that stamped the contract of an OFW who was charged illegal fees |
By Vir B. Lumicao
A Hong Kong employment
agency has been suspended by the Philippine Overseas Labor Office for acting as
a sub-agent of a local agency that had allegedly charged a newly arrived Filipina
helper a $12,500 “placement fee.”
An official of the suspended agency also returned $5,000 of
the $7,500 that Olga Pereira had already paid, and handed back her passport during
a meeting in the office of Labor Attaché Nida Romulo on Aug 19.
Romulo did not identify the agency that had stamped (or
allowed its name to be used) in the employment contract of Pereira, but the
domestic worker named it as Top Wealth Employment Agency, which has its offices
in Blissful Building on Des Voeux Road, Central.
The owner of Vast Sky Employment Ltd, which placed Pereira in Hong Kong on
Apr 11, did not show up at the Polo meeting.
“We suspended the processing of contracts from that agency (Top
Wealth) on the very day the worker came here to file a complaint,” said Romulo
in an interview. “It acted as a sub-agent and the owner knows that is against
the undertaking that it had signed with Polo,” she said.
Romulo would not say how long the suspension would be,
saying that will be determined by her superiors.
She said workers who are overcharged by agencies should not
be afraid to come out and file a complaint at POLO.
“We will act immediately against any agency once we receive
a complaint,” she said.
An amendment in February this year of laws governing employment
agencies in Hong Kong has criminalized the overcharging
of placement fees, with the maxium penalty set at three years imprisonment and
fine of up to $350,000.
A check by Romulo found out that Vast Sky, which operates
from Seven Seas Shopping Centre in North Point, was not accredited by Polo. On
finding that Top Wealth had stamped the worker’s contract, Romulo called the
company’s representative to her office.
She also advised the worker that she can report Vast Sky to
the Employment Agency Administration for overcharging and keeping her travel
document.
When Polo called up an executive of Vast Sky to tell him
about the complaint, he in turn rang Pereira
and told her how upset he was about her move. The worker said the agency representative
had offered to waive the remaining $5,000 and invited her to the agency on Aug
19 to settle the issue, but Romulo told the worker not to go.
“We’ll ask them to come here, don’t go to the agency,”
Romulo said.
The agency executive also reportedly contacted Pereira ’s employer to tell
him about the worker’s complaint. But instead of siding with the agency, the
male employer told the helper not to worry because he knew the payment was
illegal.