
While some are celebrating the reopening of the Social Development Commission, not everyone is joining in.
โSDC stands for โStill Didnโt Compensate,โโ said Sarah Woods, a former youth and family services supervisor for SDC.
Last week, the Social Development Commission resumed providing tax assistance, career services, housing-related services and child care food services after being closed for seven months.
But Woods thinks SDC should not be paying staff for new work if former employees, including her, have not been paid for work done before SDC suspended operations and laid off its entire staff.
However, William Sulton, SDCโs attorney, said that staff doing new work is precisely how former employees are going to get paid.
“I would say โฆ the way that those folks are going to get paid is by the organization reopening and submitting the required reporting documentation to get paid on grants,โ Sulton said.
Who does SDC owe?
As of last week, 45 people have unresolved claims concerning pay from SDC, according to a spokesperson for the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development, the state agency that handles employment and labor-related disputes.ย
Sulton also said that among these 45 employees are highly paid employees like George Hinton, SDCโs former CEO who resigned at the request of SDCโs Board of Commissioners.ย
The Department of Workforce Development did not provide a clear timeline for when it will make a decision about peopleโs claims, but the investigator assigned to these claims is actively working on them, the departmentโs spokesperson said.ย
Sulton said he believes there is a path for how former employees will be paid: new, or rehired, employees providing services.ย
If SDC hadnโt brought in employees to do new work, grant money couldnโt be accessed to resolve Department of Workforce Development claims, Sulton said.
The quasi-governmental community action agency provides a variety of programs and services to meet the needs of low-income residents in Milwaukee County.
Case-by-case basis
But making a claim with the Department of Workforce Development does not guarantee that person will get the full amount they say theyโre owed.ย
Each claim is being evaluated individually, and there are some disputes, Sulton said.
โFor example, there’s one employee whose time we’re unable to confirm. There’s one employee who claims that she had a conversation with their supervisor and the former supervisor promised her an increase in pay,โ Sulton said.
A common theme among claims is about getting paid out for unused paid time off, Sulton said.ย
Department of Workforce Development staff are assisting former employees with supplying the right documentation, which can include pay stubs, records they kept or other communications, according to the spokesperson.ย
Woods thought ahead in this regard.
โOn the last day, I just was taking screenshots and printing whatever I needed and emailing to myself,โ she said.
Some progress
Since the April layoffs, SDC has paid $51,000 toward what it owes people, Sulton said.ย
Most of this money came from a contribution from Unite WI.
The SDC was quite deliberate in the way it used that money, said Sulton.
โWe started with employees that earned the least amount and we paid from the bottom up. So that’s what happened,โ he said.
‘Scared to go back’
Sulton said new employees have been hired and some former employees have been rehired as part of SDCโs reopening.ย
Woods said someone from SDC asked her to come back to work, but she didnโt take them up on their offer.
She is not confident in SDC’s financial stability.
โI loved SDC when I worked there, donโt get me wrong. But I would be scared to go back,โ Woods said.ย
Hereโs more on the SDC
SDC reopening: Hereโs what you need to know
Could former board memberโs role in sale of SDC buildings pose a conflict of interest?
SDC board continues to shrink as three more commissioners resign
Barbara Toles steps down from SDCโs Board of Commissioners
SDC puts main office and warehouse up for sale
How the Social Development Commission failed its Milwaukee residents
Why did the Social Development Commission fail? Here are takeaways from our investigation

