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JUDY WOODRUFF: Providing for the elderly has become a multibillion-dollar industry, with about 29,000 residential care facilities operating across the country. But a new investigation by Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting has found that some of these facilities are profiting by exploiting caregivers, effectively paying them as little as $2 an hour to work around the clock. Jennifer Gollan has the story. JENNIFER GOLLAN: Julie Riduta knows firsthand the true costs of the long hours required for elder care. JULIE RIDUTA, Caregiver: We get up at, like, 5:00 to prepare their breakfast -- 7:00, we start helping them bathing and hygiene. JENNIFER GOLLAN: She was a live-in caregiver who expected to work around 12 hours a day, but says, in reality, the hours were much longer. JULIE RIDUTA: My experience is like 24 hours, seven days a week, $800 a month. JENNIFER GOLLAN: That comes out to about $2 an hour. Riduta, who now has a job with a different employer, says her former boss