Boss didn't give me a w-4 to fill out before I started working and now I can't get paid [closed]

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I started working at a small business owned by a couple that also own several cricket stores.



The problem was when I started working he didn't ask me to fill out any w-4 he just asked for my id social and birth certificate.



When pay day came he asked if I filled out my w-4 I told him he gave me no papers to fill out and told me he was going to come in Monday morning so he could send them off to his accountant.



I want to stop working until he pays me is that unethical?? Or should I continue working until he pays me? I know that I will quit but I don't know when its a right time.







share|improve this question














closed as off-topic by Kent A., gnat, scaaahu, Masked Man♦, ChrisF Sep 11 '15 at 14:21


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions asking for advice on what to do are not practical answerable questions (e.g. "what job should I take?", or "what skills should I learn?"). Questions should get answers explaining why and how to make a decision, not advice on what to do. For more information, click here." – Kent A., gnat, scaaahu, Masked Man, ChrisF
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.








  • 1




    Hi, I edited this slightly. I'm not really sure what you are asking though, can you edit to clarify what your question is? Are you asking how/when to quit? How to get paid? etc.
    – Elysian Fields♦
    Sep 8 '15 at 0:40






  • 1




    "and told me he was going to come in Monday morning so he could send them off to his accountant." - Presumably this is the upcoming Monday you're referring to? If so I'm not sure I see the problem as it seems like there's just some administrative stuff to clear up before he pay you. There are some wage laws around this in the US but why would you want to blow up the relationship over something so minor? EDIT: Seems like there's more to this, can you clarify your post based on your comment below?
    – Lilienthal♦
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:12











  • yeah everything was settled until the owner came in today and told me i was going to get payd 1400 a month and i work 60 hours a week.
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:50










  • 9-8-2015 is what i meant by today
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:59






  • 1




    @Iluvia: If he's changed the pay or the hours, that's a completely different question, so please ask it separately (Use the "Ask Question" button). We work differently from most other forums here - we're not just focussed on all your issues in one thread. Each 'thread' should be a separate question, and answers to "what do i do when I didn't fill in a W4" are very different from "What do i do if my employer changes my pay.
    – DJClayworth
    Sep 9 '15 at 15:00
















up vote
3
down vote

favorite












I started working at a small business owned by a couple that also own several cricket stores.



The problem was when I started working he didn't ask me to fill out any w-4 he just asked for my id social and birth certificate.



When pay day came he asked if I filled out my w-4 I told him he gave me no papers to fill out and told me he was going to come in Monday morning so he could send them off to his accountant.



I want to stop working until he pays me is that unethical?? Or should I continue working until he pays me? I know that I will quit but I don't know when its a right time.







share|improve this question














closed as off-topic by Kent A., gnat, scaaahu, Masked Man♦, ChrisF Sep 11 '15 at 14:21


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions asking for advice on what to do are not practical answerable questions (e.g. "what job should I take?", or "what skills should I learn?"). Questions should get answers explaining why and how to make a decision, not advice on what to do. For more information, click here." – Kent A., gnat, scaaahu, Masked Man, ChrisF
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.








  • 1




    Hi, I edited this slightly. I'm not really sure what you are asking though, can you edit to clarify what your question is? Are you asking how/when to quit? How to get paid? etc.
    – Elysian Fields♦
    Sep 8 '15 at 0:40






  • 1




    "and told me he was going to come in Monday morning so he could send them off to his accountant." - Presumably this is the upcoming Monday you're referring to? If so I'm not sure I see the problem as it seems like there's just some administrative stuff to clear up before he pay you. There are some wage laws around this in the US but why would you want to blow up the relationship over something so minor? EDIT: Seems like there's more to this, can you clarify your post based on your comment below?
    – Lilienthal♦
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:12











  • yeah everything was settled until the owner came in today and told me i was going to get payd 1400 a month and i work 60 hours a week.
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:50










  • 9-8-2015 is what i meant by today
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:59






  • 1




    @Iluvia: If he's changed the pay or the hours, that's a completely different question, so please ask it separately (Use the "Ask Question" button). We work differently from most other forums here - we're not just focussed on all your issues in one thread. Each 'thread' should be a separate question, and answers to "what do i do when I didn't fill in a W4" are very different from "What do i do if my employer changes my pay.
    – DJClayworth
    Sep 9 '15 at 15:00












up vote
3
down vote

favorite









up vote
3
down vote

favorite











I started working at a small business owned by a couple that also own several cricket stores.



The problem was when I started working he didn't ask me to fill out any w-4 he just asked for my id social and birth certificate.



When pay day came he asked if I filled out my w-4 I told him he gave me no papers to fill out and told me he was going to come in Monday morning so he could send them off to his accountant.



I want to stop working until he pays me is that unethical?? Or should I continue working until he pays me? I know that I will quit but I don't know when its a right time.







share|improve this question














I started working at a small business owned by a couple that also own several cricket stores.



The problem was when I started working he didn't ask me to fill out any w-4 he just asked for my id social and birth certificate.



When pay day came he asked if I filled out my w-4 I told him he gave me no papers to fill out and told me he was going to come in Monday morning so he could send them off to his accountant.



I want to stop working until he pays me is that unethical?? Or should I continue working until he pays me? I know that I will quit but I don't know when its a right time.









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Sep 8 '15 at 0:40









Elysian Fields♦

96.8k46292449




96.8k46292449










asked Sep 7 '15 at 23:34









lluvia guerrero

19113




19113




closed as off-topic by Kent A., gnat, scaaahu, Masked Man♦, ChrisF Sep 11 '15 at 14:21


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions asking for advice on what to do are not practical answerable questions (e.g. "what job should I take?", or "what skills should I learn?"). Questions should get answers explaining why and how to make a decision, not advice on what to do. For more information, click here." – Kent A., gnat, scaaahu, Masked Man, ChrisF
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.




closed as off-topic by Kent A., gnat, scaaahu, Masked Man♦, ChrisF Sep 11 '15 at 14:21


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions asking for advice on what to do are not practical answerable questions (e.g. "what job should I take?", or "what skills should I learn?"). Questions should get answers explaining why and how to make a decision, not advice on what to do. For more information, click here." – Kent A., gnat, scaaahu, Masked Man, ChrisF
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.







  • 1




    Hi, I edited this slightly. I'm not really sure what you are asking though, can you edit to clarify what your question is? Are you asking how/when to quit? How to get paid? etc.
    – Elysian Fields♦
    Sep 8 '15 at 0:40






  • 1




    "and told me he was going to come in Monday morning so he could send them off to his accountant." - Presumably this is the upcoming Monday you're referring to? If so I'm not sure I see the problem as it seems like there's just some administrative stuff to clear up before he pay you. There are some wage laws around this in the US but why would you want to blow up the relationship over something so minor? EDIT: Seems like there's more to this, can you clarify your post based on your comment below?
    – Lilienthal♦
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:12











  • yeah everything was settled until the owner came in today and told me i was going to get payd 1400 a month and i work 60 hours a week.
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:50










  • 9-8-2015 is what i meant by today
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:59






  • 1




    @Iluvia: If he's changed the pay or the hours, that's a completely different question, so please ask it separately (Use the "Ask Question" button). We work differently from most other forums here - we're not just focussed on all your issues in one thread. Each 'thread' should be a separate question, and answers to "what do i do when I didn't fill in a W4" are very different from "What do i do if my employer changes my pay.
    – DJClayworth
    Sep 9 '15 at 15:00












  • 1




    Hi, I edited this slightly. I'm not really sure what you are asking though, can you edit to clarify what your question is? Are you asking how/when to quit? How to get paid? etc.
    – Elysian Fields♦
    Sep 8 '15 at 0:40






  • 1




    "and told me he was going to come in Monday morning so he could send them off to his accountant." - Presumably this is the upcoming Monday you're referring to? If so I'm not sure I see the problem as it seems like there's just some administrative stuff to clear up before he pay you. There are some wage laws around this in the US but why would you want to blow up the relationship over something so minor? EDIT: Seems like there's more to this, can you clarify your post based on your comment below?
    – Lilienthal♦
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:12











  • yeah everything was settled until the owner came in today and told me i was going to get payd 1400 a month and i work 60 hours a week.
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:50










  • 9-8-2015 is what i meant by today
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:59






  • 1




    @Iluvia: If he's changed the pay or the hours, that's a completely different question, so please ask it separately (Use the "Ask Question" button). We work differently from most other forums here - we're not just focussed on all your issues in one thread. Each 'thread' should be a separate question, and answers to "what do i do when I didn't fill in a W4" are very different from "What do i do if my employer changes my pay.
    – DJClayworth
    Sep 9 '15 at 15:00







1




1




Hi, I edited this slightly. I'm not really sure what you are asking though, can you edit to clarify what your question is? Are you asking how/when to quit? How to get paid? etc.
– Elysian Fields♦
Sep 8 '15 at 0:40




Hi, I edited this slightly. I'm not really sure what you are asking though, can you edit to clarify what your question is? Are you asking how/when to quit? How to get paid? etc.
– Elysian Fields♦
Sep 8 '15 at 0:40




1




1




"and told me he was going to come in Monday morning so he could send them off to his accountant." - Presumably this is the upcoming Monday you're referring to? If so I'm not sure I see the problem as it seems like there's just some administrative stuff to clear up before he pay you. There are some wage laws around this in the US but why would you want to blow up the relationship over something so minor? EDIT: Seems like there's more to this, can you clarify your post based on your comment below?
– Lilienthal♦
Sep 8 '15 at 21:12





"and told me he was going to come in Monday morning so he could send them off to his accountant." - Presumably this is the upcoming Monday you're referring to? If so I'm not sure I see the problem as it seems like there's just some administrative stuff to clear up before he pay you. There are some wage laws around this in the US but why would you want to blow up the relationship over something so minor? EDIT: Seems like there's more to this, can you clarify your post based on your comment below?
– Lilienthal♦
Sep 8 '15 at 21:12













yeah everything was settled until the owner came in today and told me i was going to get payd 1400 a month and i work 60 hours a week.
– lluvia guerrero
Sep 8 '15 at 21:50




yeah everything was settled until the owner came in today and told me i was going to get payd 1400 a month and i work 60 hours a week.
– lluvia guerrero
Sep 8 '15 at 21:50












9-8-2015 is what i meant by today
– lluvia guerrero
Sep 8 '15 at 21:59




9-8-2015 is what i meant by today
– lluvia guerrero
Sep 8 '15 at 21:59




1




1




@Iluvia: If he's changed the pay or the hours, that's a completely different question, so please ask it separately (Use the "Ask Question" button). We work differently from most other forums here - we're not just focussed on all your issues in one thread. Each 'thread' should be a separate question, and answers to "what do i do when I didn't fill in a W4" are very different from "What do i do if my employer changes my pay.
– DJClayworth
Sep 9 '15 at 15:00




@Iluvia: If he's changed the pay or the hours, that's a completely different question, so please ask it separately (Use the "Ask Question" button). We work differently from most other forums here - we're not just focussed on all your issues in one thread. Each 'thread' should be a separate question, and answers to "what do i do when I didn't fill in a W4" are very different from "What do i do if my employer changes my pay.
– DJClayworth
Sep 9 '15 at 15:00










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
22
down vote













This sounds like it's a bureaucratic hiccup. Your employer expected you to fill in a W4, and you filled in only the stuff he gave you. He may have expected you to fill it in of your own accord, or he may have forgotten about it. You and them are probably relatively new to the employer/employee relationship, so it's not too surprising. It's also pretty minor in the big scheme of things. You can download a W4 and have it filled in ready for the next time you go to work.



It's also (as far as I know) not absolutely necessary that you fill in a W4 before you get paid, although it is much simpler if the paperwork has already been filled in. your employer won't know exactly how much to pay you until he sees your W4, so he would have to go back and adjust things later. It also sounds like your employer is doing his best to sort things out.



Refusing to work at this stage would be an overreaction. If you need money now I would ask specifically for an 'advance on wages', i.e. giving you some money to tide you over now, which would be deducted when you are finally paid properly so you end up with the right amount. Obviously if time goes on and no pay is forthcoming, quitting is entirely appropriate, but with new employees and small businesses there needs to be a little slack.






share|improve this answer


















  • 7




    don't forget to get the state version of the W-4.
    – mhoran_psprep
    Sep 8 '15 at 11:13

















up vote
0
down vote













A W4 is NOT required to get paid. Insist that you get paid immediately and file a complaint with EEOC immediately if he balks. All the W4 does is set how much tax you want withheld. Without one they will just assume you are single no kids.



The other paperwork you provided (Social Security number and ID) is for the I9, which is a required form, but not to get paid.



I actually had to go pretty far up the bureaucratic ladder at my current job to get a W4 because they are in the middle of switching systems. It wasn't going to affect when I got paid, just how much they took out for Uncle Sam.






share|improve this answer




















  • yeah i told him i needed the money and he didnt give me whatever he owed me he didnt give it to me and ive been working for him for 3 weeks now and i have been telling him that he needs to come in and get my paper work but he just keeps saying tomorrow
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 15:34










  • If there is new information like this, please edit it into the question.
    – DJClayworth
    Sep 8 '15 at 15:40


















up vote
0
down vote













If you have been working 3 weeks and no pay and he's not making any effort to deal with the situation, it sounds like he's trying to get as much out of you as he can and has no intentions of paying you. Maybe he knows that you are intending to quit?



I'd advise you to go immediately to your local employment office and ask what your options are. You may have to take legal action to get your money. At the very least, understand what your options are before you are forced to confront him. I have found that often when faced with an informed employee rather than an "ignorant kid" most employers will pay what they owe rather than risk getting into a legal battle or having the government get involved. I have faced this situation twice and both times it was clear that the employer believed they could take advantage of me because I was young and could be intimidated. I was very glad to have advice from the employment agency and to feel that they were available to support me.






share|improve this answer




















  • yes i talk to him and the owner and when they first hired me they said they were gonna pay me 1700 bi weekly because i worked 60 hours a week but now he says hes paying me 1400 a month
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:52

















3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
22
down vote













This sounds like it's a bureaucratic hiccup. Your employer expected you to fill in a W4, and you filled in only the stuff he gave you. He may have expected you to fill it in of your own accord, or he may have forgotten about it. You and them are probably relatively new to the employer/employee relationship, so it's not too surprising. It's also pretty minor in the big scheme of things. You can download a W4 and have it filled in ready for the next time you go to work.



It's also (as far as I know) not absolutely necessary that you fill in a W4 before you get paid, although it is much simpler if the paperwork has already been filled in. your employer won't know exactly how much to pay you until he sees your W4, so he would have to go back and adjust things later. It also sounds like your employer is doing his best to sort things out.



Refusing to work at this stage would be an overreaction. If you need money now I would ask specifically for an 'advance on wages', i.e. giving you some money to tide you over now, which would be deducted when you are finally paid properly so you end up with the right amount. Obviously if time goes on and no pay is forthcoming, quitting is entirely appropriate, but with new employees and small businesses there needs to be a little slack.






share|improve this answer


















  • 7




    don't forget to get the state version of the W-4.
    – mhoran_psprep
    Sep 8 '15 at 11:13














up vote
22
down vote













This sounds like it's a bureaucratic hiccup. Your employer expected you to fill in a W4, and you filled in only the stuff he gave you. He may have expected you to fill it in of your own accord, or he may have forgotten about it. You and them are probably relatively new to the employer/employee relationship, so it's not too surprising. It's also pretty minor in the big scheme of things. You can download a W4 and have it filled in ready for the next time you go to work.



It's also (as far as I know) not absolutely necessary that you fill in a W4 before you get paid, although it is much simpler if the paperwork has already been filled in. your employer won't know exactly how much to pay you until he sees your W4, so he would have to go back and adjust things later. It also sounds like your employer is doing his best to sort things out.



Refusing to work at this stage would be an overreaction. If you need money now I would ask specifically for an 'advance on wages', i.e. giving you some money to tide you over now, which would be deducted when you are finally paid properly so you end up with the right amount. Obviously if time goes on and no pay is forthcoming, quitting is entirely appropriate, but with new employees and small businesses there needs to be a little slack.






share|improve this answer


















  • 7




    don't forget to get the state version of the W-4.
    – mhoran_psprep
    Sep 8 '15 at 11:13












up vote
22
down vote










up vote
22
down vote









This sounds like it's a bureaucratic hiccup. Your employer expected you to fill in a W4, and you filled in only the stuff he gave you. He may have expected you to fill it in of your own accord, or he may have forgotten about it. You and them are probably relatively new to the employer/employee relationship, so it's not too surprising. It's also pretty minor in the big scheme of things. You can download a W4 and have it filled in ready for the next time you go to work.



It's also (as far as I know) not absolutely necessary that you fill in a W4 before you get paid, although it is much simpler if the paperwork has already been filled in. your employer won't know exactly how much to pay you until he sees your W4, so he would have to go back and adjust things later. It also sounds like your employer is doing his best to sort things out.



Refusing to work at this stage would be an overreaction. If you need money now I would ask specifically for an 'advance on wages', i.e. giving you some money to tide you over now, which would be deducted when you are finally paid properly so you end up with the right amount. Obviously if time goes on and no pay is forthcoming, quitting is entirely appropriate, but with new employees and small businesses there needs to be a little slack.






share|improve this answer














This sounds like it's a bureaucratic hiccup. Your employer expected you to fill in a W4, and you filled in only the stuff he gave you. He may have expected you to fill it in of your own accord, or he may have forgotten about it. You and them are probably relatively new to the employer/employee relationship, so it's not too surprising. It's also pretty minor in the big scheme of things. You can download a W4 and have it filled in ready for the next time you go to work.



It's also (as far as I know) not absolutely necessary that you fill in a W4 before you get paid, although it is much simpler if the paperwork has already been filled in. your employer won't know exactly how much to pay you until he sees your W4, so he would have to go back and adjust things later. It also sounds like your employer is doing his best to sort things out.



Refusing to work at this stage would be an overreaction. If you need money now I would ask specifically for an 'advance on wages', i.e. giving you some money to tide you over now, which would be deducted when you are finally paid properly so you end up with the right amount. Obviously if time goes on and no pay is forthcoming, quitting is entirely appropriate, but with new employees and small businesses there needs to be a little slack.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Sep 8 '15 at 11:49

























answered Sep 8 '15 at 0:41









DJClayworth

40.8k886146




40.8k886146







  • 7




    don't forget to get the state version of the W-4.
    – mhoran_psprep
    Sep 8 '15 at 11:13












  • 7




    don't forget to get the state version of the W-4.
    – mhoran_psprep
    Sep 8 '15 at 11:13







7




7




don't forget to get the state version of the W-4.
– mhoran_psprep
Sep 8 '15 at 11:13




don't forget to get the state version of the W-4.
– mhoran_psprep
Sep 8 '15 at 11:13












up vote
0
down vote













A W4 is NOT required to get paid. Insist that you get paid immediately and file a complaint with EEOC immediately if he balks. All the W4 does is set how much tax you want withheld. Without one they will just assume you are single no kids.



The other paperwork you provided (Social Security number and ID) is for the I9, which is a required form, but not to get paid.



I actually had to go pretty far up the bureaucratic ladder at my current job to get a W4 because they are in the middle of switching systems. It wasn't going to affect when I got paid, just how much they took out for Uncle Sam.






share|improve this answer




















  • yeah i told him i needed the money and he didnt give me whatever he owed me he didnt give it to me and ive been working for him for 3 weeks now and i have been telling him that he needs to come in and get my paper work but he just keeps saying tomorrow
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 15:34










  • If there is new information like this, please edit it into the question.
    – DJClayworth
    Sep 8 '15 at 15:40















up vote
0
down vote













A W4 is NOT required to get paid. Insist that you get paid immediately and file a complaint with EEOC immediately if he balks. All the W4 does is set how much tax you want withheld. Without one they will just assume you are single no kids.



The other paperwork you provided (Social Security number and ID) is for the I9, which is a required form, but not to get paid.



I actually had to go pretty far up the bureaucratic ladder at my current job to get a W4 because they are in the middle of switching systems. It wasn't going to affect when I got paid, just how much they took out for Uncle Sam.






share|improve this answer




















  • yeah i told him i needed the money and he didnt give me whatever he owed me he didnt give it to me and ive been working for him for 3 weeks now and i have been telling him that he needs to come in and get my paper work but he just keeps saying tomorrow
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 15:34










  • If there is new information like this, please edit it into the question.
    – DJClayworth
    Sep 8 '15 at 15:40













up vote
0
down vote










up vote
0
down vote









A W4 is NOT required to get paid. Insist that you get paid immediately and file a complaint with EEOC immediately if he balks. All the W4 does is set how much tax you want withheld. Without one they will just assume you are single no kids.



The other paperwork you provided (Social Security number and ID) is for the I9, which is a required form, but not to get paid.



I actually had to go pretty far up the bureaucratic ladder at my current job to get a W4 because they are in the middle of switching systems. It wasn't going to affect when I got paid, just how much they took out for Uncle Sam.






share|improve this answer












A W4 is NOT required to get paid. Insist that you get paid immediately and file a complaint with EEOC immediately if he balks. All the W4 does is set how much tax you want withheld. Without one they will just assume you are single no kids.



The other paperwork you provided (Social Security number and ID) is for the I9, which is a required form, but not to get paid.



I actually had to go pretty far up the bureaucratic ladder at my current job to get a W4 because they are in the middle of switching systems. It wasn't going to affect when I got paid, just how much they took out for Uncle Sam.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Sep 8 '15 at 14:37









Bill Leeper

10.7k2735




10.7k2735











  • yeah i told him i needed the money and he didnt give me whatever he owed me he didnt give it to me and ive been working for him for 3 weeks now and i have been telling him that he needs to come in and get my paper work but he just keeps saying tomorrow
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 15:34










  • If there is new information like this, please edit it into the question.
    – DJClayworth
    Sep 8 '15 at 15:40

















  • yeah i told him i needed the money and he didnt give me whatever he owed me he didnt give it to me and ive been working for him for 3 weeks now and i have been telling him that he needs to come in and get my paper work but he just keeps saying tomorrow
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 15:34










  • If there is new information like this, please edit it into the question.
    – DJClayworth
    Sep 8 '15 at 15:40
















yeah i told him i needed the money and he didnt give me whatever he owed me he didnt give it to me and ive been working for him for 3 weeks now and i have been telling him that he needs to come in and get my paper work but he just keeps saying tomorrow
– lluvia guerrero
Sep 8 '15 at 15:34




yeah i told him i needed the money and he didnt give me whatever he owed me he didnt give it to me and ive been working for him for 3 weeks now and i have been telling him that he needs to come in and get my paper work but he just keeps saying tomorrow
– lluvia guerrero
Sep 8 '15 at 15:34












If there is new information like this, please edit it into the question.
– DJClayworth
Sep 8 '15 at 15:40





If there is new information like this, please edit it into the question.
– DJClayworth
Sep 8 '15 at 15:40











up vote
0
down vote













If you have been working 3 weeks and no pay and he's not making any effort to deal with the situation, it sounds like he's trying to get as much out of you as he can and has no intentions of paying you. Maybe he knows that you are intending to quit?



I'd advise you to go immediately to your local employment office and ask what your options are. You may have to take legal action to get your money. At the very least, understand what your options are before you are forced to confront him. I have found that often when faced with an informed employee rather than an "ignorant kid" most employers will pay what they owe rather than risk getting into a legal battle or having the government get involved. I have faced this situation twice and both times it was clear that the employer believed they could take advantage of me because I was young and could be intimidated. I was very glad to have advice from the employment agency and to feel that they were available to support me.






share|improve this answer




















  • yes i talk to him and the owner and when they first hired me they said they were gonna pay me 1700 bi weekly because i worked 60 hours a week but now he says hes paying me 1400 a month
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:52














up vote
0
down vote













If you have been working 3 weeks and no pay and he's not making any effort to deal with the situation, it sounds like he's trying to get as much out of you as he can and has no intentions of paying you. Maybe he knows that you are intending to quit?



I'd advise you to go immediately to your local employment office and ask what your options are. You may have to take legal action to get your money. At the very least, understand what your options are before you are forced to confront him. I have found that often when faced with an informed employee rather than an "ignorant kid" most employers will pay what they owe rather than risk getting into a legal battle or having the government get involved. I have faced this situation twice and both times it was clear that the employer believed they could take advantage of me because I was young and could be intimidated. I was very glad to have advice from the employment agency and to feel that they were available to support me.






share|improve this answer




















  • yes i talk to him and the owner and when they first hired me they said they were gonna pay me 1700 bi weekly because i worked 60 hours a week but now he says hes paying me 1400 a month
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:52












up vote
0
down vote










up vote
0
down vote









If you have been working 3 weeks and no pay and he's not making any effort to deal with the situation, it sounds like he's trying to get as much out of you as he can and has no intentions of paying you. Maybe he knows that you are intending to quit?



I'd advise you to go immediately to your local employment office and ask what your options are. You may have to take legal action to get your money. At the very least, understand what your options are before you are forced to confront him. I have found that often when faced with an informed employee rather than an "ignorant kid" most employers will pay what they owe rather than risk getting into a legal battle or having the government get involved. I have faced this situation twice and both times it was clear that the employer believed they could take advantage of me because I was young and could be intimidated. I was very glad to have advice from the employment agency and to feel that they were available to support me.






share|improve this answer












If you have been working 3 weeks and no pay and he's not making any effort to deal with the situation, it sounds like he's trying to get as much out of you as he can and has no intentions of paying you. Maybe he knows that you are intending to quit?



I'd advise you to go immediately to your local employment office and ask what your options are. You may have to take legal action to get your money. At the very least, understand what your options are before you are forced to confront him. I have found that often when faced with an informed employee rather than an "ignorant kid" most employers will pay what they owe rather than risk getting into a legal battle or having the government get involved. I have faced this situation twice and both times it was clear that the employer believed they could take advantage of me because I was young and could be intimidated. I was very glad to have advice from the employment agency and to feel that they were available to support me.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Sep 8 '15 at 20:22









Francine DeGrood Taylor

3,075713




3,075713











  • yes i talk to him and the owner and when they first hired me they said they were gonna pay me 1700 bi weekly because i worked 60 hours a week but now he says hes paying me 1400 a month
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:52
















  • yes i talk to him and the owner and when they first hired me they said they were gonna pay me 1700 bi weekly because i worked 60 hours a week but now he says hes paying me 1400 a month
    – lluvia guerrero
    Sep 8 '15 at 21:52















yes i talk to him and the owner and when they first hired me they said they were gonna pay me 1700 bi weekly because i worked 60 hours a week but now he says hes paying me 1400 a month
– lluvia guerrero
Sep 8 '15 at 21:52




yes i talk to him and the owner and when they first hired me they said they were gonna pay me 1700 bi weekly because i worked 60 hours a week but now he says hes paying me 1400 a month
– lluvia guerrero
Sep 8 '15 at 21:52


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