Wine workers: grape-stained labor law.

AuthorShackford, Scott
PositionCitings - Brief article

THE TINY Westover Winery in Castro Valley, California, is open only 10 hours a week and earns about $11,000 a year in profits for owner Bill Smyth and his wife. In order to produce Westover's specialty ports, he has drawn on volunteers, often folks who themselves were learning to make wine. The volunteers were essentially interns or apprentices.

Their work turns out to be illegal. California forbids the use of volunteer labor at for-profit businesses, period. Like a foot crushing grapes, the state's Department of Industrial Relations came down hard on Smyth, fining him $115,000--equivalent to a decade's earnings. As a result, the winery expects to shut its doors by the end of the year.

It's not uncommon for small wineries to use volunteer labor, and the...

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