Pipeline workers: Company owes us
Work stopped on project late last month; some owed thousands
Yunni Perez says he doesn’t know how he’s going to get his wife and two children home to Guatamala after the companies he was working for building a pipeline in Garfield County laid off 150 workers without paying them for their past three weeks of work. About a dozen former employees of Energy Transfer Company and U.S. Central Pipeline protested Tuesday in front of the Mesa County Courthouse and the Grand Junction City Hall.
Gretel Daugherty
Yunni Perez says he doesn’t know how he’s going to get his wife and two children home to Guatamala after the companies he was working for building a pipeline in Garfield County laid off 150 workers without paying them for their past three weeks of work. About a dozen former employees of Energy Transfer Company and U.S. Central Pipeline protested Tuesday in front of the Mesa County Courthouse and the Grand Junction City Hall.
By
Staff
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
About a dozen former employees of Energy Transfer Company and U.S. Central Pipeline protested Tuesday in front of the Mesa County Courthouse and Grand Junction City Hall, between Fifth and…
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