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Indentured Servants, Circa 2009

by: Barbara Koeppel  |  ConsortiumNews.com

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Local governments across the US have recently passed stricter laws against undocumented workers, backed by increased enforcement raids on businesses. (Photo: AP / Paul Connors)

The immigration imbroglio is the gorilla in the room that won't go away.

    Feeding on this and last years' gigantic job losses and fear of more to come, anti-immigrant anger is exploding across the U.S. Thus, Nativists like Arizona's Sheriff Joe Arpaio are nudged to over-the-top nastiness: Just a month ago, he proudly paraded his villains (aka illegals) through the streets of Phoenix before deporting them.

    In fact, since 1872, when the U.S. passed its first anti-immigrant laws - at that time, against Chinese workers - Nativists have played the same xenophobia card: With fundamentalist fervor, they fire up those with fragile incomes to fear immigrants, legal or otherwise. Lately, local governments have passed punishing laws against undocumented workers, while enforcement agencies ratchet up raids on factories and farms.

    At the same time, Chambers of Commerce insist foreign guest workers are vital to U.S. businesses. Heeding the call, politicians promise the guests will figure in any new immigration plan. Details, however, are absent.

    What they don't say is the U.S. guest worker saga is riddled with abuse. Nor do they mention it squeezes low-skilled domestic workers, who are also bullied in the race to the bottom and are routinely denied jobs, since the guests will work for anything under any conditions, given their desperation.

    Thus, before the new administration answers the Chambers' prayers, it must examine our guest worker schemes, which the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) in a 2007 report calls "close to slavery."

    The schemes began during World War II with the Bracero program, when a half million Mexicans labored at American farms. Congress ended the program in 1964 because, among other reasons, exploitation was endemic.

    Revised Plan

    In the 1980s, the U.S. launched two new plans - an H2A guest program for farm workers and H2B scheme for all other low-wage industries, such as poultry and seafood processing, construction, forestry, timber, restaurants and hotels.

    Since then, employers have secured millions of guest workers: In 2008, the U.S. issued 124,000 temporary visas. The real number is far greater, because returning workers' visas aren't counted in the figure.

    On paper, H2A rules are reasonable. Foreign workers apply in their countries and, when approved, get visas and contracts stating that employers must give the workers at least 75 percent of their promised hours, decent free housing, workmen's compensation insurance (for injuries), transportation to and from their countries, access to free federal legal services and the same health/safety protections afforded U.S. workers.

    In reality, the rules are a sham. According to Mary Bauer, SPLC's director of its Immigrant Justice Project, guest workers are cheated every day in every way.

    For H2B workers, there's not even a charade. They have no contracts, period.

    For both sets of workers, the program should note that only the vulnerable need apply.

    Why? Most important, the Department of Labor (DOL) regulations are stacked against them from the start, since they bequeath employers boundless power: Most critical, they only allow the guests to work for the company that gets their visas. No matter how abusive the arrangements, they can't switch jobs. If they complain, they're fired, must leave the U.S. within 30 days, pay for return tickets and lose remaining wages.

    This spells financial disaster for the workers because they borrow heavily to pay recruiters' bribes: An average $500-$2,000 in Mexico, $8,000-$12,000 in Thailand, $20,000 in India. Aware of their debt, employers secure their workers' silence.

    To make matters worse, a beneficent George W. Bush pushed through midnight regulations in December 2008 as a gift to U.S. companies: The new rules effectively slashed the guests paltry wages by $2-$3 an hour and scrapped housing standards: Before, the DOL had to certify that housing was safe. Now, employers must simply state that, "through no fault of their own" approved housing is unavailable.

    Fortunately, President Obama just reversed the changes, but it will still take time for the new rules to kick in.

    Holding the Cards

    In fact, employers hold all the cards: They confiscate workers' visas, passports and return tickets - though this is illegal. But illegality is irrelevant.

    For example, although companies are required to pay hourly wages or equivalent piece rates, Bauer claims most firms ignore the rules most of the time. The case of Bimbo's Best Produce (yes, Bimbo's!), a strawberry grower in Louisiana, is instructive. In 2005, its workers sued for back wages and Bimbo settled. Bimbo applied for more workers in 2006 and 2007, the DOL gave the okay, and, undaunted, the company slashed wages to $3-$4 an hour - well below the minimum wage.

    Forestry firms - notorious rule breakers - pay workers $15-$30 for every 1,000 seedlings they plant, which typically takes 12 hours - although the law says they should get $6-$10 an hour. But these firms are not unique. Bauer says almost every company in all sectors that SPLC checked lied about employee time sheets - with as many as 30 hours a week missing from paychecks.

    Pay fraud is just one abuse. Housing is dilapidated and unsanitary: For example, the SPLC says that Evergreen Forestry in North Carolina kept workers in a shed with one cold water spigot, no heat or toilets throughout the winter. When workers tried to leave, a boss locked them up until they repaid what he'd lent them to buy sleeping bags, fuel and a portable toilet. Bauer insists these conditions are typical.

    Regina Luginbuhl, who heads North Carolina's DOL, disagrees. She says H2A workers are protected against abuses because the program allows them to access free legal services. Also, she says H2A housing is usually "decent" because employers must register with her agency.

    But her office has just five full-time inspectors who check only half the guest worker housing units a year. She insists this beats conditions in states like Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana, which don't inspect at all.

    Illness and injury are also common. Farm workers get dehydrated - several died in the past few years. Water, where provided, is often contaminated. Green sickness from picking tobacco, allergic reactions to pesticides or bee strings may be severe, but workers keep working.

    A Sacramento Bee article noted "guest forest workers are routinely subjected to conditions not tolerated elsewhere in the U.S.... .gashed by chain saws and bruised by tumbling logs." When injured, companies rarely pay for medical care, days missed or medicine.

    Feeble Enforcement

    Finally, the DOL's enforcement of the rules is feeble: In 2004, it checked violations at 89 out of the 6,700 farms with H2A workers. At the 8,900 work sites with H2B workers, the DOL inspected none.

    When this reporter tried to update the numbers, Jennifer Kaplan and Susan Bohnert of the DOL's Washington DC press office, insisted the agency doesn't collect them. A supervisor repeated the story.

    Without DOL data, advocate groups have no way to tally the true extent of violations, notes Ramon Ramos, a paralegal for 30 years with Texas Rio Grande Legal Aid: Their own statistics only cover a small number of worksites. Worse, when they try to get DOL figures, the states' DOL offices, like the national one, stonewall.

    Even when advocates like Legal Aid and SPLC learn of violations and win cases against employers, the DOL sits on its hands: H2B workers sued Shores and Ruark Seafood of Virginia for $150,000 in back wages and won, and the company was fined.

    Although the DOL cited the company two other times for wage violations, it still approved the firm's application for new workers. In Arriaga v. Florida Pacific Farms, a judge ruled the company had to repay workers' transport and visas fees. But the DOL didn't enforce the decision.

    Bauer says another problem is that DOL's program is completely hidden. "When a worker calls us about an abuse, we need to see his contract and learn if the DOL has inspected the workplace for violations." But the DOL insists this information is "secret" - between employers and the DOL - and the SPLC must file Freedom of Information (FOIA) requests to get it.

    And this, in turn, spells gridlock. When the SPLC filed a case against the Mississippi DOL in 2007 for not providing information, the judge ruled in SPLC's favor. Displeased with the decision, the state promptly passed a law saying its DOL office was not obliged to give the information. Seizing on the successful strategy, Kentucky passed a similar law in 2008. Where local DOL offices do respond, the answers arrive two years later, when the workers are long gone.

    Speaking Out

    The few workers who speak out - usually those who've already been fired or badly injured - are branded troublemakers and blacklisted. Baldemar Velasquez, president of the Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC) said that before his union organized North Carolina's guest farm workers, the state's blacklist had 16,000 names.

    Although the list was dismantled when the North Carolina Growers Association signed a contract with FLOC in 2004, blacklisting elsewhere is alive and well. Legal Aid's Ramos says he hasn't seen formal lists in other states, but knows the principle operates.

    "Mexican guest workers tell me their previous U.S. employers won't re-hire them." Why? "They might have asked for water in the fields, or something like that. Not because they're slackers. I've never met a guest farm worker who didn't give 100 percent, because they want to return," Ramos says.

    Critics like Bauer and Ramos insist the abusers are not a few bad apples, but the norm. In 2008, the SPLC sued Signal International for 600 highly skilled Indian pipe fitters and welders hired to work on ships in Texas and Mississippi for defense contractors (Signal is a subsidiary of Northrup Grummon).

    Snared by ads that Signal ran in Indian newspapers promising high wages, along with permanent visas for workers and their families, each worker paid recruiters (illegally) $20,000 to land the job.

    Once in the U.S., Signal paid entry level wages ($13 an hour); the jobs were temporary; families were not allowed to come; the men were kept in guarded labor camps and forced to work. SPLC charged Signal with human trafficking, fraud, racketeering and civil rights abuses; but the men are $20,000 poorer and stuck. Bauer adds that U.S. skilled workers' wages would be at least double.

    Critics also claim that the DOL and employers' practices hurt companies that want to play by the rules, because they can't compete with the majority, which break them. Critically, they lower wages and conditions for all unskilled workers.

    Recruiting Abuses

    The exploitation extravaganza begins even before the guests reach American shores. U.S. companies contract with foreign recruiting firms to find poor workers, who sign on - despite the recruiters' bribes.

    How do recruiters pull it off? FLOC's Velasquez says workers don't know this is illegal or how else to get in the program. Second, the DOL insists it doesn't control what happens outside U.S. borders.

    Velasquez says "The whole system is wildly profitable for everyone but the workers. Recruiting is very big business."

    Big enough to murder for.

    In 2005, when FLOC opened an office in Monterey, Mexico to educate workers about their rights, its staff were stalked, slandered by local newspapers, and the office burglarized.

    In 2007, a FLOC organizer, alone in the office, was murdered. Police caught one of the killers and FLOC gave them the names of two others. But the other two have not yet been arrested.

    Observers say the DOL could improve conditions in a stroke - since it doesn't need Congress to change the program: If it lifted the rule that ties the guest workers to one employer, the men would be free to bargain for a better deal or change employers, taking their visas with them. Eventually, the worst employers would lose their workers and have to clean up their acts.

    Also, the DOL could offer H2B workers the same protections as H2A workers receive (on the books).

    It could also crack down on employers that break the rules and levy fines that count. At the very least, it could reject violators' requests for new workers.

    But Velasquez says "unless all guest workers have labor rights, as FLOC won in North Carolina, they won't be able to fight the abuses." Still, he's optimistic.

    "The state's growers now run decent guest worker programs. Why not elsewhere?" he asks.

    One hope is that Hilda Solis, the new Secretary of Labor, will right some decades-old wrongs. However, history isn't on her or the guest workers' side.

    --------

    Barbara Koeppel is a free-lance investigative reporter based in Washington DC.

  

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Comments

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As jobs for US citizens and

As jobs for US citizens and legal immigrants are disappearing there is no tolerance for either Greedy, dishonest, law breaking employers or people who enter this country illegally who are also breaking the law. And last but not least, the quote of the week is from House speaker Nancy Pelosi, who on Wednesday called the effort to enforce federal immigration law "Un-American." But she sure likes to spend our taxes. Hey Nancy - How many illegals are paying taxes, contributing to social security or any health benefits or plans (or the employers)?

Slavery by any other name.

Slavery by any other name. What Bush did: what do you expect from the worst president in American history? Department of Labor staffed at the Federal level and statewide by wolves in sheep's clothing. And that story that America is the land of the free and home of the brave: BS! Good luck Ms. Solis. Your heart will be in the right place. Unfortunately Repugnantcan Congressmen and Senators are heartless, as are the many state officials in their states.

Illegals pay taxes,

Illegals pay taxes, especially local excise taxes for roads, schools, &c. on food, clothing, other household goods. Income taxes could be paid if employers would go to the trouble of asking for them, but then if they went legit with the IRS it would expose what they're doing insofar as "indentured servitude." Why would a Mexican come work in the US for those conditions? It's that or getting caught in the crossfire of the all-out drug war going on. Also, the policia down there can put a gun to your head if they don't like you, make you dig your own grave. then bury you alive and run their jeeps back and forth over the dirt. How often does that happen? I don't know. But it happens.

This Bible-wielding

This Bible-wielding phony,Arpaio, who paraded those men in the streets of AZ, humiliating their humanity and personhood, should be accosted by the Attorney General of AZ and brought to trial. This is despicable -and I am, once again, shamed by current-day American politico-religious hatefulness exhibited by conservative Republicans (the only kind remaining). These white supremacist, angry Christians, like Arpaio, have so infiltrated our political, economic, and social strata, that it's going to take the creation of many new laws, state and federal, to get these low-life bloodsuckers of freedom and integrit and insulters of human civil rights out of our hair. Only the left can save us from these sorts of villians, but Obama has been ignoring the left on almost all quarters. Unfortunate.

In response to "Dr. Frogg's"

In response to "Dr. Frogg's" question about how many"illegals" pay taxes -- the answer is, most/all of them. Immigrants, documented or not, pay sales taxes. The rents they pay are used by landlords to pay property taxes. Those who work under false Social Security numbers pay Social Security taxes, though they will never be able to collect Social Security. And 25% of undocumented workers even pay income taxes, under the hope that it may help them in their quest for legal status. Aside from the taxes they pay, there is the obvious fact of the labor they contribute to our economy, which is compensated for much less than its value. If undocumented workers were a net loss for the U.S. economy, the govt. and the business sector would make a serious effort to get rid of them. They don't, because exploitation pays.

Hey, Dr. Frogg -- MOST

Hey, Dr. Frogg -- MOST illegals working in the US have both income & SS taxes taken out of their pay...many employers just don't pay their quarterly taxes to the gov't. And many more such workers don't ever file 1040s for fear of apprehension and deportation, so the gov't gets to keep those taxes, even though if the worker filed, he/she would be entitled to a refund. Likewise, those workers never receive any SS benefits. Very, very few employers are ever called to account for hiring undocumented workers, even though most know they're hiring illegals, which is in itself, illegal. It is ALWAYS the workers who get screwed, NEVER the employers, thanks to the criminal syndicates that have been operating under the guise of "government" for so many years. And that goes for non-union workers who are US citizens, as well. Paranoid nativists simply make the situation worse, giving cover for the unscrupulous employers to exploit citizen & undocumented workers alike.

Racism, pure and simple.

Racism, pure and simple. Brown-skinned people can be mistreated at will, as law enforcement works for the white bosses. Laws are on the books, but law breaking is endemic. It's not Jim Crow anymore, it's Jose Crow now. All this current talk about socialism is pure bullshit, as in a truly socialist society workers' rights are just as important as owners' rights, society abhors racism and law enforcement upholds laws and cares little about the status or race of law breakers. We have a damn long road ahead of us, if we ever want to attain what was perceived to be possible by the framers of the Constitution and Bill of Rights.

We need strong laws

We need strong laws targeting crimes against humanity. Humans are far more inhumane when they are allowed to be. There is no excuse, it is allowed or it wouldn't be. In a so called Christian country, any crime of inhumanity implicates Christianity. So I challenge all Christians to show your stuff and prey on these offenders. From Senate to sweeper get these demons identified, please. My favorite biblical quote? "Oh ye hypocrite".

Let us talk about the abuse

Let us talk about the abuse for American SKILLED workers - H1Bs. Programmers and analysts for instance, getting H1Bs since "there is a shortage of skilled workers in that field" (willing to work for $30-40K in DC at less than half the going rate). The Indian recruiting companies get one valid number and use it contract 20 people to different companies (the number is valid if EVER checked) and further they use bait and switch on interviews - send in a smooth talking English speaking person then swap in someone who hardly can be understood let alone expected to write coherently - those staff meetings will drive you crazy trying figure out what was said. Then they drive the rates down (the companies win on low bids and still pocket a better difference than the employee gets). Oh and in the 2ndor 3rd year of the program DHS actually issued twice as many H1Bs as the GOP Congress had authorized - gee and no one was to blame nor deported. By this means in the last 8 years we have destroyed what was a prominent industry in the US.

You fail to mention in the

You fail to mention in the article how such actions, legal and otherwise, play out in the growing ''distaste' for anything American around the world... I spend a lot of time in SE Asia. Ten years ago, Americans were looked up to.Anything American was sought after. Dreams of a life in America were the favorite fantasy of many. Having an American friend was something to feel pride in and show off to family, friends and neighbors. Marrying an American was tantamount to an early trip to heaven... Now, this has all changed dramatically... The things locals do not like about America is no longer exclusive to the American Government and detached from any personal animosity towards an American Citizen as it was in the past. Such negative feeling can come across in very personal terms nowadays and in a very articulate and well thought out manner... Much to the happiness of many Americans described in the above article, I am sure that they will be happy to know that most SE Asian Women who hope to marry a foreigner much prefer a European or Canadian over an American and a life in America any day of the week now. America is no longer viewed so much as beacon of freedom and hope for a brighter future, but rather as a dangerous place one might make a quick buck and then get out of while the getting is good if they have enough personal fortitude to risk it... We are viewed more and more as shifty, grubby, selfish beyond compare, potentially dangerous and a people with very poor manners who care little about family or anyone other than oneself... I'll sum it up by just saying that we have definitely declined a great deal in the eyes of most of this part of the world.... BUT.... I can also say that the day Obama won the election, a LOT of locals came up to me with very happy faces and shook my hand, gave me thumbs up and expressed a great deal of hope for change in America... I too have a lot of hope for my country... :)

A PRIME example of these

A PRIME example of these tactics by American businesses is Bo Pilgrim in Mt. Pleasant, TX---has a humongous chicken business that is now in bankruptcy. He's claiming that taxes have brought him down. He built his business on the back of illegals--recruited them openly, made sure they made it to Mt. Pleasant, paid NO employment taxes for them. He made bezillions of dollars, built a huge mansion, AND a statue of himself. It was only when the feds began to raid his illegals that he ran into trouble and had to close 3 plants, then Chapter 11. He had been making huge donations to local politicians and civic events to help them turn their heads away from his illegal employees. He deserves to lose everything. All he had to do was go to Dallas, San Antonio, Houston, and find people who needed to work, pay them a decent wage, PAY EMPLOYMENT TAXES, and he'd still be in business and still making plenty of money. It's guys like Bo who have created our illegal immigrant problem.

"Illegals" gots to git legal

"Illegals" gots to git legal before there can even be a conversation about the rest of the story--like levels, benefits, rights(???!!), etc. All my people did it the legal way, and it's bogus to argue that "humanity" trumps all other considerations of USA immigration issues....The left does no favors to potential legal citizens with its "WE ARE THE WORLD.." at all costs mentality.

Judging from his name,

Judging from his name, Sheriff Joe Arpaio parents or grandparents were immigrants themselves. Didn't they come to America for a better life? I wonder how they were treated when they came to America? Were they abused and paraded through the streets like this? Gee Sheriff, when did you become so "All American"?

a trained economist should

a trained economist should be tasked with developing a slavery index which would effectively create an oppression scale measuring such things as energy expended by the human subject to produce energy expendable by bosses and recruiters. such an index could then be applied to each and every "guest" or "illegal" worker whose sweat blood and tears contributes to our pitiful national GDP. we would then have reliable statistics of exactly what percentage of persons living in the united states are actually living under the lash of slavery. any economist takers?

The treatment of these

The treatment of these workers is obscene, and a taste of how Right Wing Corporates would like to treat American workers, given the chance. However, The whole guest worker program has been expanded from farm workers to every sector of the economy that needs cheap labor to provide food, products, services at throwaway prices. How about this scenario: no guest workers, reasonable wages for American workers and less paper, fast food, and other products in our waste stream. Guest workers, other than the seasonal harvesters who began these programs, are intimately connected to a cheap overconsuming lifestyle.

Responding to the situation

Responding to the situation in Mexico, it's corrupt there, more than here. It really bothers me that in most of Western Europe there is parity between countries economically and socially. Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain aren't dirt poor anymore compared to France, the UK, or West Germany, like 50 years ago. But here in North America, while Canada and the US are somewhat equal economically, Mexico is a third world country. I don't know the complete answer as to why, and corruption in Mexico is the number one reason, but there are others. It has been and remains a cheap source of labor for the USA, and whatever policies here or there have allowed that condition to exist have to change!

Half the kids in Denver

Half the kids in Denver Public Schools speak Spanish as a first language. I'm not saying send everyone home, but how much can you give up before you're eating the seed corn?

What about this DOESN'T make

What about this DOESN'T make one think of Berlin in the 1930s?