Parts Supplier Fined Over Child Labor
Alabama supplier to Hyundai, Kia paid over $30,000 in penalties after investigation found teens as young as 13 working at plant.

Investigators found children as young as 13 working at facility.
IMAGE: Getty Images/deepblue4you
An Alabama auto parts supplier was fined over child-labor accusations after teenagers as young as 13 were found working for the Korean-operated business.
A U.S. district court ordered SL Alabama LLC to cease violating the Fair Labor Standards Act's child-labor provisions and from shipping goods produced within 30 days of violations. The U.S. and Alabama labor departments investigated the business, finding “oppressive child labor by employing minors under 16 in a manufacturing occupation.”
“The U.S. Department of Labor acted swiftly to protect workers as young 13, 14 and 15 years old from harm and prevent SL Alabama from employing these minors in hazardous occupations,” said Regional Solicitor of Labor Tremelle I. Howard in Atlanta in a U.S. Department of Labor news release.
The release indicated that SL Alabama was established in 2003 and employs about 650 people in the area. It makes headlights, rear combination lights, and side mirrors for Hyundai and Kia and also has operations in Tennessee and Michigan.
SL Alabama paid a more than $30,000 penalty in the case. It also agreed to introduce monitoring and training programs to prevent violations.
READ MORE: DOL Investigations and Employing Minors in Dealership Service Departments
Originally posted on P&A Magazine
More Compliance

Dealer Ads and the FTC
The agency has made it clear in recent enforcement actions and warnings, in auto retail and other industries, that advertised prices must include all nonoptional costs to the consumer.
Read More →
AAMS Training and Mosaic Compliance Services Merge
The strategic combination is intended to expand technology-driven compliance solutions for the automotive industry.
Read More →
The Jurisprudence of Pricing
Legal concept helps makes sense of California’s recently passed version of the failed federal CARS legislation.
Read More →
Trump 2.0 and Enforcement Priorities
The upshot is don’t relax, because regulation indeed continues.
Read More →
June Is Automotive Service Professionals Month
Observance is opportunity to thank technicians for their crucial role in auto retail.
Read More →
Cox Automotive Releases Compliance Guide
New edition walks auto dealers through relevant regulations for 2025.
Read More →
Trump 2.0 and Retail Automotive
Administration’s plans should generally bode well for the industry.
Read More →
CARS Rule Update: 5th Circuit Oral Arguments Recap
In this video, Jim Ganther of Mosaic Compliance Services, recaps the key takeaways from the oral arguments in the critical CARS Rule case, including potential outcomes and what dealers should do to stay ahead of compliance changes.
Read More →
State of the CARS Rule, Part 3
The players in the automotive industry should coordinate their responses to this pending regulation.
Read More →
The Future of Car Dealer Documents
Where forms, documents, agreements and contracts could be in 50 years.
Read More →