An Alabama marine construction company has agreed to pay $20 million to more than 200 guest workers from India who alleged they were kept in labor camps so squalid and crowded that one worker attempted suicide.
The settlement, announced Tuesday, resolves 11 lawsuits against Signal International filed in Alabama, Texas and Louisiana. The company has declared bankruptcy, so the settlement must be approved in bankruptcy court.
Signal International brought guest workers to Pascagoula, Miss., and other sites in 2006 and 2007 to repair oil rigs and other heavy machinery in the Gulf of Mexico that were damaged during Hurricane Katrina.
The men were trained in India as welders and pipe fitters, and came to the U.S. on promises that they would get green cards and permanent U.S. residency, according to the lawsuits filed by the workers, who put their families deep in debt to reach the U.S.
They received no green cards. Instead, the lawsuits alleged, they were confined to guarded camps, where 24 men were crammed into living spaces the size of a double-wide trailer.
Los Ángeles Times