This research examines the relationships between contact with work centers, immigration status, precarious employment, and exploitative working conditions. Work centers are non-profit organizations that developed in response to deteriorating wage and working conditions within the lower wage market. Each work center is oriented around the needs of the local community, depending on its unique cultural and economic context. They are intended to support immigrants by providing services like advocacy, organizing, policy making, and serve as intermediaries among low-wage workers, labor markets and employers. Work centers are important because low-wage, precarious, exploitative labor is linked to deteriorating health, low social and economic mobility, violations of worker and human rights, low unionization, and a lack of political voice. Unfortunately, work centers receive little attention from scholars. My study will use 8 semi-structured, qualitative interviews with employers, immigrant workers, and employees at work centers to understand the connection between work centers and the experience of immigrant workers. I will then analyze the interviews by cross-referencing prior notes, to avoid any biases. Studying the services that work centers provide to immigrant workers within the lower wage market can highlight these under researched groups, illuminating how immigrant workers are overcoming individual and structural barriers within the labor market to achieve upward mobility. My project will give us a better understanding of the effectiveness of work center services like legal, social, and cultural resources to improve the working conditions of immigrant workers, and how they can do more to empower workers to advocate and collectively fight for better working conditions, protect their legal rights as workers, and collectively fight for benefits within the lower wage market.