In America employers use immigration laws against workers
who speak out. Under George W. Bush, ICE raids often coincided with union
campaigns—such as the 2008 raid at Agriprocessors, a meatpacking plant in
Postville, Iowa that the United Food and Commercial Workers was trying to
organize, where 389 people were arrested and 270 jailed for using Social
Security numbers that weren't their own. Under Obama what it has preferred called
"silent raids" or "desktop raids." It has quadrupled the
number of audits of workplaces' I-9 as businesses are required to fire
employees who can't prove they're legally allowed to work. "Employment
eligibility verification" forms, to about 2,000 a year, according to a
2013 report by the National Employment Law Project (NELP). "It's very
convenient for employers," says an immigration specialist at one national
union "An I-9 audit gets rid of the complainers. It's really damaging when
you have organizing going on."
"The buildup of immigration enforcement provides
unscrupulous employers with additional tools to retaliate against immigrant
workers who seek to exercise their rights," the NELP report said. More
than 2 million undocumented immigrants were deported in Barack Obama's first
five years in office—more than in the Bush administration's full eight—and
employers are still finding ways to use immigration laws against workers
complaining about conditions or trying to organize unions.
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Nelson Motto, an organizer with the National Guestworker
Alliance in New Orleans explained "The biggest challenge is that it's
extremely difficult to get ICE to admit that they were tipped off by the
employer." In one case, when construction workers in Washington, DC, were
trying to form a union, the house where some of them were staying was raided.
"We haven't been able to prove that the employer tipped ICE, but if you
ask the workers, they're 100 percent sure."
Workers have some protection, says Mike Henneberry of UFCW
Local 5 in California, from a 1998
memorandum of understanding between the Department of Homeland Security and the
Department of Labor that ICE will hold off on raids if there's a
union-organizing campaign underway. Last year, says Motto, Jamaican guest
workers cleaning hotels in Panama City and Dustin, Florida were able to use
this to wage a strike when their employer threatened to deport them after they
complained about not getting enough hours and receiving paychecks for $0. The
key tactic, he explains, was immediately notifying ICE that there was a labor
dispute going on and getting the agency to issue a written neutrality
agreement. "That provided the workers a bit of relief," he says.
However, the 1998 memorandum of understanding with the Department of Labor
suspends ICE enforcement at a workplace only while there is a federal
investigation of workers' wage and hour or health and safety complaints, the
NELP report notes. It does not suspend it during state investigations of wage
theft or safety violations, or protect workers who make claims about
discrimination or for workers' compensation—and it "explicitly allows ICE
to resume or begin an audit after the Department of Labor investigation
concludes."
Employers who pay cash, who classify workers as independent
contractors to escape wage and safety regulations, or are franchises
technically not connected to the brand-name corporation, are harder to track.
These employers are more likely to initiate audits on their own, and their
workers have fewer protections when they try to organize or make complaints. "If
we have any kind of smoking gun that the employer did that, we can go after
them," he says, but if not, they can't prove anything—although in one
case, an employer left a voicemail message telling the union, "I'm going
to have to call ICE if you don't back down."
Immigrant construction workers are particularly vulnerable,
says Cliff Smith of the Roofers, because their work is intermittent, temporary
or day labor. He calls Los Angeles "the wage-theft capital of the
country." In 2012, according to the NELP report, two Brazilian
construction workers from Massachusetts were deported after they tried to
collect $6,500 a subcontractor owed them for a summer's work installing plaster
and sheetrock in Boston. When they went to the subcontractor's home in the New
Hampshire suburbs, he called police, who stopped them and turned them over to
ICE.
Simply exploiting fear can discourage workers from speaking
out. "You only have to call ICE a couple times, and then everyone knows
it's a possibility," says Nicky Coolberth of the UFCW.
In agriculture and related industries, where about 70
percent of workers are undocumented, the anti-union consultants employers hire
can be "pretty subtle," says Pete Maturino. In formal unionization
campaigns, he explains, organizers are allowed to visit workers at home, so
employers give their names and addresses to the National Labor Relations Board,
which passes them on to the union. The consultants will apologize to the worker
for that, saying, "I had to give your name and address to the federal
government, and I know your situation."
At an onion-processing plant in Firebaugh, California, he
says, consultants told workers in one-on-one meetings "you have to be
documented to be a member of the union." At the Apio salad-processing
plant in Guadalupe on the Central Coast, the consultants told workers that
"union membership requires you to be documented, so a lot of you are going
to lose your jobs." In fact, the union is required to represent members no
matter what their status.
Last February, after 19 workers at Alameda County Industries,
a garbage-recycling company in San Leandro, California, signed a letter
announcing that they were going to sue for being paid almost $6 an hour less
than the city's $14.17 "living wage," 18 of them were fired on the
grounds that an ICE audit a year before had revealed they were undocumented.
The news of the audit provoked a strike, and in October, workers at the
facility voted overwhelmingly to join Local 6 of the International Longshore
Workers Union.
"A lot of times, undocumented workers are our strongest
supporters, because they've been through so much and they won't take any
crap," says Henneberry.
The Supreme Court's 2002 decision in Hoffman Plastic
Compounds v. NLRB, in which a 5-4 majority held that a Mexican immigrant
illegally fired for being a union supporter had no right to get back pay or his
job back, because he was "never lawfully entitled to be present or
employed in the United States."
That decision, says Smith, "unleashed this whole
wave" of employers claiming that undocumented immigrants were not entitled
to back pay, workers' compensation, or freedom from racial or gender
discrimination. Lower-court rulings have moderated that somewhat since then,
she adds, as "there is no credible argument that unauthorized workers
aren't entitled to their basic wage for work—a contrary view would condemn them
to slavery."
In 2011, when a Colorado restaurant worker sued his former
employer for wage theft, a federal court ruled that the employer's attempts to find
out his immigration status were "an improper attempt to harass and
intimidate Plaintiff."
In 2011, a federal judge in Washington state ordered
apple-orchard workers suing their employer for sexual harassment to reveal
their immigration status, saying that the women's emotional distress might have
been caused by being undocumented and not from having had a foreman stick his
hand down their pants. In a class-action suit about wage theft in California
last year, the judge said undocumented workers could not be among the named
plaintiffs representing the class of unpaid workers.
Giving workers some kind of assurance that they won't be
deported doesn't mean retaliation will stop, says Nelson Motto of the
Guestworkers Alliance. The Obama plan might even make things worse for those
who don't qualify, by pushing them deeper into the underground economy. The
AFL-CIO stated "Providing protection to undocumented individuals who
assert their workplace and civil rights protects all workers," it says,
and "allowing them to be detained or deported for such activity has a
dangerous chilling effect on activity to enforce workplace standards."
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