6 Sonic Drive-In restaurants in northern Nevada pay $71K for child labor violations

NV teen employees were working more hours than permitted in a hazardous occupation

  • Six Sonic Drive-In restaurant owners and operators in northern Nevada have settled violations of federal child labor regulations by paying more than $71,000 in civil penalties.
  • Sonic Drive-In committed over 170 violations of child labor provisions, including allowing 14- and 15-year-old employees to work more hours than allowed.
  • The department said SDI and the company’s owners, Taylor M. Cain, Ian N. Cain, and Quinn M. Cain, have already paid the $71,182 in civil penalties.

The owners and operators of six Sonic Drive-In restaurants in northern Nevada have paid more than $71,000 in civil penalties to resolve violations of federal child labor regulations at their locations in Reno, Sparks, Carson City, Fallon and Minden, the U.S. Labor Department said.

They also agreed to pay $274 in overtime owed to two teenagers who weren't compensated for working more than 40 hours in a workweek, the department said Monday.

Federal investigators in the department's Wage and Hour Division determined SDI of Neil LLC, which operates as Sonic Drive-In, committed more than 170 violations of the child labor provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act.

They allowed 14- and 15-year-old employees to work more hours than what was permitted by the regulations and assigned them to operate manual deep fryers, a task considered a hazardous occupation, the department said in a news release.

SDI and the company’s owners Taylor M. Cain, Ian N. Cain, and Quinn M. Cain have already paid the $71,182 in civil penalties, the department said.

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Close up of Sonic restaurant drive-in logo on storefront in northern Idaho. The owners and operators of six Sonic Drive-In restaurants in northern Nevada have paid over $71,000 in civil penalties to resolve violations of federal child labor regulations. 

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Gene Ramos, the department’s Wage and Hour Division district director in Las Vegas, said teens benefit from learning new skills in the workforce, but "federal law dictates how employers must protect children by making sure their first jobs are safe and that they do not interfere with their education or well-being."

"The Fair Labor Standards Act allows for developmental experiences but restricts the employment of young workers in certain jobs and provides for penalties when employers do not follow the law," he said.

SDI did not immediately respond to an email from The Associated Press seeking comment on Monday. A woman who answered the phone at the listing on its website for its USA/Canada operations said it was not possible to leave a phone message seeking comment.

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