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Record
of
U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of Labor
Relations
OMB
Approval No. 2501-0009
(exp.
12/31/2013)
Employee
Interview
Public
reporting burden for this collection of information is estimated to
average 15 minutes per response, including the time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and
maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the
collection of information. This agency may not collect this
information, and you are not required to complete this form, unless
it displays a currently valid OMB control number. The information is
collected to ensure compliance with the Federal labor standards by
recording interviews with construction workers. The information
collected will assist HUD in the conduct of compliance monitoring;
the information will be used to test the veracity of certified
payroll reports submitted by the employer. Sensitive
Information.
The information collected on this form is considered sensitive and
is protected by the Privacy Act. The Privacy Act requires that these
records be maintained with appropriate administrative, technical,
and physical safeguards to ensure their security and
confidentiality. In addition, these records should be protected
against any anticipated threats or hazards to their security or
integrity that could result in substantial harm, embarrassment,
inconvenience, or unfairness to any individual on whom the
information is maintained. The
information collected herein is voluntary, and any information
provided shall be kept confidential.
1c.
Contractor or Subcontractor (Employer)
job?
3a.
How long on this
job
before today?
3b.
Last date on this
day
on this job?
3c.
No. of hours last
4a.
Hourly rate of pay?
Vacation
Yes
No
Medical
Yes
No
Pension
Yes
No
4b.
Fringe Benefits?
Yes
No
4c.
Pay stub?
5.
Your job classification(s) (list all)
---
continue
on a separate sheet if necessary
6.
Your duties
7.
Tools or equipment used
Y
N
Y
N
Are
you an apprentice or trainee?
Are
you paid for all hours worked?
10.
Are you paid at least time and 1/2
for all hours worked in excess of 40 in a week?
11.
Have you ever been threatened or coerced into giving up any part of
your pay?
12a.
Employee Signature
12b.
Date
13.
Duties observed by the Interviewer (Please be specific.)
14.
Remarks
15a.
Interviewer name (please print)
15b.
Signature of Interviewer
15c.
Date of interview
Payroll
Examination
16.
Remarks
17a.
Signature
of Payroll Examiner
17b.
Date
Previous
editions are obsolete
Form
HUD-11 (08/2004)
1a.
Project Name
2a.
Employee Name
1b.
Project Number
2b.
Employee Phone Number (including area code)
2c.
Employee Home Address & Zip Code
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2d.
Verification of identification?
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No
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Form
HUD-11 (08/2004)
Once
the corresponding certified payroll reports are received, the
information on the HUD-11 shall be compared to the payroll reports.
Any discrepancies noted between the HUD-11 information and that on
the payroll report shall be noted in Item 16, Remarks. If
discrepancies are noted, follow-up actions to resolve the
discrepancies must be taken.
Items
16 – 17b: The information on the form HUD-11 may be reviewed
for general compliance, initially. For example, are the job
classification and wage rate stated by the employee compatible with
the classifications and wage rates on the applicable wage decision?
Are the duties observed by the interviewer consistent with the job
classification?
The
level of specificity that is warranted is directly related to the
extent to which interview(s) or other observations indicate that
there may be violations present. If interviews indicate that there
may be underpayments involving a particular trade(s), the
interviewer is encouraged to interview as many workers in that
trade(s) that are available.
Items
13 – 15c: These items represent some of the most important
information that can be gathered while conducting on-site
interviews. Please be specific about the duties you observed the
employee performing. It may be easiest to make these observations
before initiating the interview. Please record any comments or
remarks that may be helpful. For example, if the employee
interviewed was working with a crew, how many workers were in the
crew? Was the employee evasive?
Self-explanatory
Items
8 – 12b:
Be
certain that the employee’s responses are specific. For
example, job classification (#5) must identify the
Items
5 – 7:
trade
involved (e.g., Carpenter, Electrician, Plumber) – responses
such as “journeyman” or “mechanic” are not
helpful for our purposes.
Items
3a – 4c: Enter the employee’s responses. Ask the
employee whether they have a pay stub with them; if so, determine
whether
the pay stub is consistent with the information provided by the
employee.
Items
2a – 2d: Enter the employee’s full name, a telephone
number where the employee can be reached, and the
employee’s
home address. Many construction workers use a temporary address in
the locality of the project and have a more permanent address
elsewhere from which mail may be forwarded to them. Obtain a more
permanent address, if available. Ask the employee for a form of
identification (e.g., driver’s license) to verify their name.
Self-explanatory
Items
1a - 1c:
Completing
the form HUD-11
Note
that the interview itself and the information collected on the form
HUD-11 are considered confidential. Interviews should be conducted
individually and privately. All laborers and mechanics employed on
the job site must be made available for interview at the
interviewer’s request. The employee’s participation,
however, is voluntary. Interviews shall be conducted in a manner and
place that are conducive to the purposes of the interview and that
cause the least inconvenience to the employer(s) and the
employee(s).
Information
recorded on the form HUD-11 is evaluated for general compliance and
compared to certified payroll reports submitted by the respective
employer. The comparison tests the veracity of the payroll reports
and may be critical to the successful conclusion of enforcement
actions in the event of labor standards violations. The thoroughness
and accuracy of the information gathered during interviews is
crucial.
This
form is to be used by HUD and local agency staff for recording
information gathered during on-site interviews with laborers and
mechanics employed on projects subject to Federal prevailing wage
requirements. Typically, the staff that will conduct on-site
interviews and use this form are HUD staff and fee construction
inspectors, HUD Labor Relations staff, and local agency labor
standards contract monitors.
General:
Instructions
OMB
Approval No. 2501-0009
(exp.
10/31/2010)
U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of Labor
Relations
Record
of Employee Interview Instructions
| File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
| Author | Atwater, Anthia C |
| File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
| File Created | 2021-01-27 |