Lauren Silva  |  November 17, 2021

Category: Discrimination

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Salvation Army arc class action
(Photo Credit: Ken Wolter/Shutterstock)

Salvation Army ARC Labor Class Action Lawsuit Overview:

  • Why: The workers allege The Salvation Army exploits vulnerable individuals through its Adult Rehabilitation Center program.
  • Who: Four former workers filed a class action lawsuit against The Salvation Army.
  • Where: The class action lawsuit was filed in Illinois federal court.

The Salvation Army’s Adult Rehabilitation Center (ARC) program takes advantage of vulnerable individuals and profiting from exploitative labor by force and threats of harm, say four former workers in a new class action lawsuit. 

Specifically, the lawsuit accuses The Salvation Army National Corporation and The Salvation Army, known as Central Territorial of The Salvation Army (SA Central Territory), of violating the Federal Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act. SA Central Territory oversees The Salvation Army work in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin.

The lead plaintiffs are Darrell Taylor, Kevin Lewis, Darrell Burkhart, and Leevertis Page, all of whom worked in the ARC under SA Central Territory.

Plaintiffs Allegedly ‘Threatened’ and Coerced By ARC Employees

Taylor, Lewis, Burkhart, and Page claim they were each required to work at least eight hours per day and at least 40 hours per week for food, shelter, and “gratuity” between $1 and $25 per week. 

They say their food assistance EBT cards with their SNAP benefits were confiscated upon their arrival at ARC as a “condition of [their] participation” in the program. When Page left the ARC, his EBT card was returned with a $0 balance, says the Salvation Army class action lawsuit. 

All four men say they were threatened during their time at ARC if they worked too slowly or failed to follow instructions, were cut off from the outside world and were forced to rely on ARC for survival. 

Plaintiff Burkhart says he was also threatened with an arrest warrant unless he worked as instructed although he was sick at the time. After four or five weeks, he left the ARC “because he could not take the grueling, forced labor any longer,” and was taken to jail as this violated his probation. 

The class action lawsuit seeks damages, including punitive damages, and reasonable attorneys’ costs. 

ARC Operates Under ‘Work Therapy’ Guise, Class Action Says

The Salvation Army bills the ARC program as a “no-cost program [to] tackle the symptoms and causes of alcohol and drug dependence” by placing participants in “work therapy,” says the class action. 

Participants in The Salvation Army’s ARC program are required to “labor long hours in physically demanding jobs” in the company’s commercial thrift stores and other business locations as part of their program requirements, according to the complaint. 

ARC program participants are either referred to the program by the courts as a term of parole or probation or are walk-in participants who are “often extremely economically vulnerable,” the class action says. Justice-referred participants must abide by the program or else face violating parole or probation and being sent back to jail. 

In exchange for their work, participants are given cash “gratuity” between approximately $1 and $25 per full week of work, says the Salvation Army class action lawsuit. This low amount prevents participants from saving a significant enough amount to get back on their feet, keeping them reliant on ARC, the class action argues. 

Participants must also work for food and shelter from ARC, and are supposedly limited from seeking additional paid work elsewhere, says the lawsuit.

Additionally, ARC employees allegedly regularly threaten participants with removal for failure to comply with instructions; Page says he saw participants kicked out of the program “during wintery conditions and in the middle of the night.”

The class action lawsuit proposes a Nationwide Walk-In Class and a Nationwide Justice-Referred Class which cover all participants in The Salvation Army’s program, both walk-in and justice-referred, who performed labor in the ARC program within the 10 years before Nov. 15, 2021. There is also a proposed Central Territory Walk-In Class and a Central Territory Justice- Referred Class which cover individuals more specifically to The Salvation Army’s Central Territory.

The Salvation Army is not the only organization accused of forced labor practices. CoreCivic, a for-profit operator of prisons and immigration detention centers, along with US Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) have been accused of forcing detained immigrants to work for little to no pay. 

Have you or a loved one participated in The Salvation Army’s ARC program? Tell us about it in the comments section below!

The plaintiffs are represented by David Fish and M. Nieves Bolaños of Fish Potter Bolaños, PC.

The Salvation Army ARC Labor Class Action Lawsuit is Taylor, et al. v. The Salvation Army National Corporation, et al., Case No. 1:21-cv-06105, in the US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.


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49 thoughts onThe Salvation Army ‘Forced Labor,’ Abused ARC Participants, Alleges Class Action

  1. eboni derby says:

    my husband went to salvation army and they did him so wrong there

  2. Robert Spivey says:

    How can I participate in the class action lawsuit? Who are the attorneys?

    1. Vernon Bivins says:

      I was in two different Salvation Armys here in California. They do make you sign up for food stamps and after I left I went through hell to get food stamps at City Team because Salvation Army never cancelled my case and collected two months after I was gone. They only care about money not your recovery. If you ask questions they target you with petty write ups and essays and punish you with extra hours. There’s so much to tell. How can I get in the class action?

  3. Mary Williams says:

    I need to know how to join the suit. I attended the arc in Memphis Tennessee. I was made to leave when I went to er and found out I had hep. They put me out with nowhere to go. I’m from Alabama. It was Christmas’ eves eve. They told me I was no longer a good fit for the program because I was a liability.

  4. Brandi says:

    My husband went there between 2019 and 2020 thinking this place would help him with addiction. This place made him work for $1 a week. He barley made any money to survive. I was sending him money constantly. The only way we could talk is if he snuck on a library computer to get on Facebook. Drugs took him from in 2021. I would love to join suit!!

  5. Jason says:

    How do I get on with the lawsuit

  6. ANDREW M says:

    I just left the ARC In des moines iowa due to unlivable conditions and forced labor ethics. GOD IS NOT HAPPY WITH ARC.. Its suppose to be a House of prayer not a gain of money.. Wish they would’ve Repented..

  7. ANDREW says:

    I just left the ARC In des moines iowa due to unlivable conditions and forced labor ethics. GOD IS NOT HAPPY WITH ARC.. Its suppose to be a House of prayer not a gain of money.. Wish they would’ve Repented..

  8. Andrew Griffith says:

    It’s the same in Dallas Texas we were told the air conditioning was broken and that it would be 4 week’s to install a new one . That was 4 week’s ago this morning were told that it will be 4 more weeks so we’ve spent and will spend the hottest summer on record without A.C. Personally having graduated and stuck here for 8 months tommorow I truly believe it’s a lie because Captain Gibson doesn’t want to pay the bill although the salvation army store for the first two quarters took in $214000 dollars add free labor and all merchandise is donated and 90 percent of the food is donated combined with the salvation armys possession of all the residence E B T cards which I have good
    sense enough to discern that the staff use to fill the vending machines in which the residents use with of course their gratuity so it’s a win win . However I think I could compose a compelling writ regarding extortion racketeering by exploiting the disenfranchised and I will work on it

  9. Elaine williams says:

    Sign me up I was at the Memphis arc for 17 months

  10. Ken Hensley says:

    I’m at the arc now..in Detroit mi. I was working at Cabot in the compactor, pushing 500 lb boxes up a narrow ramp to dump and retrieve the box..a faulty pallet jack stopped most the way up, I struggled to hard and got an umbilical hernia, I wasn’t taken to the hospital and kirt never even filed a insident report..I was told to do another job for two days, before I went over heads to get to the e.r. I’ve been back twice for the hernia, still forcing me to work and I was wondering if there is a lawyer out there to help me..I snuck a phone in because they wouldn’t let me even call to get help

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