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Page Updated: April 19, 2008
FACT SHEET on the Sentosa
27 Nurses
1. Background: The 26 nurses and 1 physical
therapist ("Sentosa 27") were all recruited
from the Philippines through the Philippine-based
Sentosa Recruitment Agency.
- Sentosa Recruitment Agency is a single proprietorship
under the name of Francis Luyun.
- Upon information received, Francis Luyun also
works in New York as the Director of International
Recruitment for the New York-based Prompt Nursing
Employment Agency, doing business as Sentosa
Services.
- Bent Philipson is the managing partner and
chief operating officer of the various nursing
home facilities that are the US principals/clients
of Sentosa Recruitment Agency.
- Sentosa Care, LLC is a healthcare management
company owned and/or controlled by Bent Philipson.
2. 2004-2006:
- The nurses were sponsored as immigrant workers
and arrived in the US in 2004, 2005 and early
2006.
- The lone physical therapist was sponsored
as a nonimmigrant H-1B worker.
3. RN expectations as per contract :
- The nurses and PT were promised that they
would be hired by and would work directly for
the nursing home facility that sponsored each
of them.
- Each of the nurses/PT signed individual employment
contracts with the particular nursing home facility
that sponsored them.
- The nurses were promised that they could immediately
start working as registered nurses upon their
arrival in New York as their limited permit
applications had already been processed.
- Among the nursing home facilities that sponsored
the nurses and PT were Avalon Gardens, Woodmere
Nursing & Rehab Center, Brookhaven Nursing
& Rehab Center, Garden Care Center, New
Surfside Nursing & Rehab Center, Split Rock
Nursing & Rehab Center, Bayview Nursing
& Rehab Center, Franklin Nursing & Rehab
Center, Golden Gate Nursing & Rehab Center,
and Townhouse Nursing & Rehab Center.
4. What they found:
- Upon their arrival in New York, most of the
nurses were surprised to find themselves working
at nursing home facilities different from the
ones that sponsored them. Worse, all of them
discovered that they were made agency employees
of Prompt Nursing Employment Agency, doing business
as Sentosa Services.
- Prompt/Sentosa Services was not a party to
any of the employment contracts signed by any
of the nurses/PT.
- Prompt/Sentosa Services paid the salaries
of the nurses/PT and provided most of the nurses
with health insurance coverage. The worksite
assignments were made by Prompt/Sentosa Services,
which likewise regularly issued work memoranda
to the nurses. The nurses/PT believed that they
were employed by Prompt/Sentosa Services. Even
their nurse supervisors told them they were
agency nurses. Some were even issued ID cards
clearly showing them as agency nurses.
- Most of the nurses discovered upon their arrival
that their limited permit applications had not
even been submitted yet or had not been processed.
- Because of the lack of a license/permit, which
was not their fault, the nurses could not immediately
start working. They were not immediately given
work upon their arrival, contrary to what was
promised them.
- Some nurses had to agree to work as clerks
to support themselves. Prompt/Sentosa Services
paid them between $12 and $14 per hour, until
about two months later when their limited permits
finally arrived.
- The paid working hours in a 40-hour work week
were unilaterally reduced from 37.5 hours to
35 hours. Some nurses were not paid for actual
hours worked; some were underpaid their hourly
rates; and some were not paid night shift differentials
and holiday pay. The nurses assigned at facilities
located in Queens and in the Bronx were clearly
not paid at least the DOL prevailing wage rates.
5. What they did:
- The nurses questioned the arrangement whereby
they were not working directly for their petitioning
employers. Luyun told them that the arrangement
was acceptable as all the nursing home facilities
were owned/controlled anyway by Philipson.
- Some nurses complained that they were not
reimbursed for the licensure & certification
expenses, and even the plane fare from Manila
to New York which Sentosa Recruitment Agency
promised to be reimbursed to them as soon as
they arrived in New York. A few nurses were
not given the promised two months of free housing
accommodations.
- The actual green cards of some nurses and
their family members were initially withheld
by Philipson and Luyun. It was only when the
nurses told Philipson and Luyun that they had
inquired from the USCIS and that the USCIS told
them that the green cards had already been sent
to the Sentosa office that the green cards were
eventually given to the nurses.
- The nurses likewise complained about the lack
of proper and complete orientation or training
and the disproportionate nurse-patient ratio
that they felt would compromise the patient's
care and safety.
- The nurses made known all their concerns and
issues, either verbally by phone or formally
by letters or e-mail messages, and met with
their supervisors and Philipson and Luyun. However,
their concerns were ignored and not satisfactorily
addressed.
- One nurse called the attention of the New
York State Nurses Association about her work
conditions. Two nurses complained to the Philippine
Labor Attaché's Office in Washington
DC and also to the Consulate General in New
York, which referred them for legal advice and
consultation with lawyer Felix Vinluan. It turned
out that there were many nurses similarly-situated
as those who complained to the Consulate.
- Before submitting their resignation letters,
the nurses properly endorsed the care and custody
of their patients to the incoming charge nurse.
Contrary to earlier newspaper reports, the nurses
did not walk out of their shifts and did not
abandon their patients.
- The nurses also knew that Philipson and Sentosa
could easily find their replacements as there
were several Filipino immigrant nurses still
waiting for assignments at the Sentosa staff
houses in Surfside and in Woodmere, NY when
they resigned. They knew that the facilities
could easily secure nurse-replacements from
Prompt/Sentosa Services and other staffing companies
they were getting temporary staffing from.
6. Their legal battle:
- After having been interviewed by the Vinluan
Law Office, the nurses were advised that they
have ground to file discrimination charges against
the nursing home facilities that sponsored them
but did not provide them with direct-hire employment.
- Vinluan advised them of their rights as injured
parties to breached employment agreements, as
well as their rights as immigrant workers. Vinluan
advised the nurses that the Sentosa group of
companies engaged in fraud and misrepresentation
in the immigration process. Instead of being
directly hired by their petitioning employers,
as per the immigration process and in consonance
with their respective employment agreements,
the nurses were made by Philipson and Luyun
as agency employees of Prompt/Sentosa Services.
- On April 6, 2006, Vinluan lodged the
nurses' discrimination charges against Philipson
and his group of companies before the Office
of Special Counsel for Immigration Related Unfair
Employment Practices under the Department of
Justice in Washington DC.
- Shortly thereafter, the nurses submitted their
resignation letters to Sentosa, Philipson and
the nursing home facilities they were made to
work at.
- Philipson retaliated against the nurses by
filing a civil case (breach of contract) against
them, and even impleaded Atty. Vinluan as party
defendant for alleged tortious interference
of contracts.
- May 4, 2006: The nurses, through counsel,
also filed administrative cases against the
Philippine-based Sentosa Recruitment Agency,
for violations of Philippine recruitment rules
and regulations before the Philippine Overseas
Employment Administration (POEA).
- May 24, 2006: POEA (in the Philippines)
administrator signed a preventive suspension
order against Sentosa Recruitment Agency.
- June 8, 2006: The suspension order
was surprisingly lifted less than two weeks
later as New York Senator Schumer interceded
in behalf of Sentosa by writing POEA Administrator
Baldoz, Labor Secretary Sto. Tomas, and New
York Consul General Rebong. Upon information
received, the nurses believe that Philipson
is a big political contributor of Senator Schumer.
Then Presidential Chief of Staff Mike Defensor
was also reported to have called up Administrator
Baldoz and Con-Gen Rebong a day before Baldoz
signed the order lifting the preventive suspension
order.
- July 5, 2006: The Supreme Court Justice
(NY) hearing the breach of contract case
denied Sentosa's application for preliminary
injunction as the plaintiffs (Sentosa) failed
to establish "their likelihood of prevailing
on the merits of the breach of contract claim".
The civil case is ongoing, as depositions are
presently being undertaken.
- Further, Philipson, his web of companies and
their politically-connected lawyers filed administrative
cases against the nurses before the New York
State Education Department's Office of Professional
Discipline (NYSED's OPD). They alleged that
the nurses abandoned their patients when they
resigned.
- September 11, 2006: The POEA (in
the Philippines)denied the nurses' motion
to reissue the preventive suspension order as
no other cases of similar nature had allegedly
been filed against Sentosa Recruitment Agency.
- September 13, 2006: After a couple
of administrative hearings, the NYSED's Office
of Professional Discipline closed the administrative
complaints against the nurses. Atty. Vinluan
received an e-mail message by the Director of
Investigations of NYSED's OPD informing him
that the administrative cases were closed,
and that there was no finding of patient abandonment
and that there was no good moral character issue
that would prohibit the nurse-permittees from
securing their limited permits or nursing licenses.
- January 5, 2007: The Supreme Court
Justice hearing the civil cases, on a motion
to reargue, affirmed his July 5, 2006 Order,
and denied Sentosa's application for preliminary
injunction on the ground that "there was
no showing by plaintiffs of a clear likelihood
of success on the merits vis-à-vis their
claim against the defendants".
- March 22, 2007: Ten nurses (Elmer Jacinto,
Juliet Anilao, Harriet Avila, Mark Dela Cruz,
Claudine Gamiao, Jennifer Lampa, Rizza Maulion,
James Millena, Ma Theresa Ramos, and Ranier
Sichon), who used to work at Avalon Gardens
Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center in Smithtown,
NY, were indicted for conspiracy and endangering
the welfare of children and disabled persons.
The nurses believe that Philipson and his lawyers
used again their political connections to make
the District Attorney's Office in Suffolk County
file the criminal charges against the ten nurses.
The nurses' lawyer (Vinluan) was also indicted
for allegedly conspiring with the nurses.
- May 22, 2007: The ten nurses and Vinluan,
through their counsels, filed their motions
to dismiss the indictments.
- August 31, 2007: The US Department
of Justice's Office of Special Counsel dismissed
the nurses' discrimination charges. This dismissal
was however moot and academic because as early
as May 14 and 15, 2007, the nurses had already
filed their complaints before the Office of
the Chief Administrative Hearing Officer (OCAHO).
The OCAHO Judge has taken jurisdiction over
the discrimination complaints. At present, the
parties are at the discovery stage before trial.
- September 4, 2007: The nurses' complaints
against Sentosa Recruitment Agency were dismissed
by the POEA Administrator (in the Philippines)
on the ground that there was allegedly no regulation
on overseas employment that was violated by
the respondents. The POEA made a finding of
fact that there was allegedly a Recruitment
Agreement between Sentosa Recruitment Agency
and Sentosa Care LLC. The nurses timely filed
an appeal to the Secretary of Labor, arguing
that the records bear no such agreement between
Sentosa Recruitment Agency and Sentosa Care
LLC, and that in fact, POEA's records clearly
prove that the nurses individually entered into
employment agreements with a particular nursing
home facility, and not with Sentosa Care LLC.
Sentosa Care LLC is not an accredited principal
of Sentosa Recruitment Agency.
- September 28, 2007: The Supreme Court
Justice (NY) hearing the criminal cases
denied the 10 nurses and Vinluan's motions to
dismiss the indictments.
- October 29, 2007: The Justice in the
criminal cases reset the hearing to December
17, when he would inquire if the 10 nurses understood
that they had the right to have individual counsels,
and if they had decided to continue being represented
by just one counsel (Atty. James Drucker).
Trial is tentatively scheduled to begin on January
28, 2008.
- November 15, 2007. A third batch of
complaints was filed before the POEA (in
the Philippines) against Sentosa Recruitment
Agency. The nurse-complainants request the POEA
Administrator to suspend Sentosa Recruitment
Agency's license. Their request, as well as
the request of the second batch of complainants
(filed on November 24, 2006) for the issuance
of the preventive suspension order remain not
acted upon by the POEA. The second and third
batches of complainants remind the POEA of its
earlier September 11, 2006 Order, that here
they are, making the same complaints against
Sentosa Recruitment Agency.
- November 27, 2007. The Philippine Senate's
Committee on Labor and Employment began its
investigation, in aid of legislation, into the
recruitment activities of Sentosa Recruitment
Agency. SRA's Luyun, POEA's Baldoz and Mike
Defensor did not show up.
- November 27, 2007: The Justice for
Sentosa 27+ Campaign enjoins the people to request
the Governor of New York to appoint an independent
Special Prosecutor to handle the criminal cases
so that the Avalon 11 (10 nurses and Vinluan)
will have a fair and objective trial. This call
is premised on the defendants' belief that their
indictments came about because Sentosa's owners
and lawyers used their political clout with
the Suffolk County District Attorney. As reported
in Newsday's investigative report, Sentosa's
owners and lawyers sought a private audience
with the Suffolk County District Attorney and
requested him to investigate the nurses. The
District Attorney had previously received political
campaign contributions from Sentosa's lawyers.
Sentosa's owners are big political contributors
to fund-raising activities chaired by their
influential lawyers.
- December 5, 2007: The Philippine House
of Representatives' Committee on Labor and Employment
began its own investigation in aid of legislation
into the recruitment activities of Sentosa Recruitment
Agency. SRA's Luyun, POEA's Baldoz and Mike
Defensor failed to appear.
- December 17, 2007: The Avalon 10 nurses
testified in open court that they understood
their right to have their own separate defense
counsel and that there could be potential conflicts
of interest should they have common or joint
legal representation. They waived their right
to secure separate counsels, and decided to
have James Drucker continue as their joint defense
counsel. The Assistant District Attorney moved
the Court to appoint a counsel to explain to
the nurses their rights and the effects of waiving
the same. Court reserved to make a ruling on
the motion.
- January 16, 2008: NY Dept. of Health
found that the nurses resignations did "not
endanger patients' health".
- January 24, 2008: The National Labor
Relations Commission (in the Philippines)
also dismissed the cases filed by 31 nurses
against Sentosa Recruitment Agency and its foreign
principals for alleged illegal dismissal, non-payment
and underpayment of salaries and other money
claims. Atty. Tim Calumpoing is now preparing
an appeal .
- February 26, 2008: In a seven-page
joint resolution issued by Senior State Prosecutor
Doris Alejo, the Department of Justice (in
the Philippines) dismissed the case of alleged
illegal recruitment filed against officials
of Sentosa Recruitment Agency in the Philippines
and Sentosa Care LLC of New York by 13 Filipino
immigrant nurses for insufficiency of evidence.
- April 11, 2008: The Appellate Division,
Second Department of the Supreme Court of New
York, on April 11, ordered the stay of the criminal
prosecution of the Avalon 11 pending determination
of their Art. 78 petition for a writ of prohibition.
What the Appellate Court did is grant the defense
lawyers' request to freeze the trial date until
the Appellate Court decides the writ in June.For
more details go to: http://www.s27plus.com/
- April 19, 2008: In a strong show of
support for the Sentosa nurses, today The American
Nurses Association and its affiliate, the New
York State Nurses Association (NYSNA), today
filed an amicus brief with the New York State
Supreme Court supporting a motion to drop criminal
charges against the group of Filipino registered
nurses charged with patient endangerment after
resigning their positions. Read
more...
Related Articles:
Court
Appearance of Sentosa 27 > at ARTHUR M. CROMARTY
COURT COMPLEX (Supreme Court, County Court, Juror
Information & Law Library) 210 Center Drive,
Riverhead, NY 11901
Special Intention
Mass for Sentosa 27> sponsored by PNA Chapters
all across the United States.
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