The Washington Court of Appeals affirmed the Department of Labor & Industries' infraction against A.W.R. Construction for failing to provide a required disclosure statement under the Contractor Registration Act, rejecting the contractor's arguments that the building was residential rather than commercial.
What This Ruling Means
# A.W.R. Construction v. Washington Department of Labor
**What Happened**
A.W.R. Construction disagreed with the Washington Department of Labor & Industries over a building project. The company claimed the building was residential and therefore didn't need to provide certain required paperwork to workers. However, the Department of Labor said the building was actually classified as commercial, which meant the contractor had a legal duty to give workers a disclosure statement under state contractor registration rules.
**The Court's Decision**
The Washington Court of Appeals sided with the Department of Labor. The court upheld a penalty against A.W.R. Construction for failing to provide the required disclosure statement. The company was ordered to pay $500 in damages.
**Why This Matters**
This ruling reinforces that contractors cannot avoid their legal obligations by claiming a project is residential when it's actually commercial. These disclosure statements exist to protect workers by giving them important information about the contractor. The decision signals that the state takes these worker protection requirements seriously and will enforce them against companies that try to sidestep the rules.
This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.
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