- By
Cecilia Muñoz
- New America Media
- Feb 09, 2006
After
17 years working as an advocate for immigrant rights in Washington,
you’d think that nothing surprises me anymore. I’ve been in meetings
with immigration officials who either don’t understand how much
disruption they cause in our communities, or they don’t care. I’ve heard
public officials make promises that they don’t intend to keep. I’ve seen
government agencies do excellent work, and I’ve seen them at their
worst. It takes a lot to astonish me.
|

Cecilia
Muñoz |
- But when I heard that the Governor of Louisiana told a
Congressional Committee this week that she had no idea that immigrant
workers who are rebuilding New Orleans are suffering abuse at the
hands of employers, I couldn’t believe my ears. Is it possible that
something so obvious to those of us in immigrant communities is so
invisible to the Governor of the state where it’s happening? After
all, immigrant workers are a presence in the construction industry all
across the country.
When day laborers gather at various places in cities all over the
country looking for an honest day’s work, many of them end up at
construction sites. The industry tells us that without immigrant
workers it’s not clear how America’s buildings would get built. When
the rebuilding started in the Gulf, we all knew that immigrants would
be a part of it.
Immigrants’ hard work in the construction industry comes at a real
price, especially for those who don’t have their papers. Far too many
employers take advantage of the immigrants who work for them,
promising wages that they don’t deliver. Much of the reason that
community groups organize day labor centers is to help workers get the
wages they have been promised. It happens all over the country.
It seems to be worse in the Gulf Coast. Billions of federal dollars
are flowing to big companies that hire contractors, who hire
subcontractors, who eventually hire workers to do the rebuilding.
There are tent cities in church parking lots in Louisiana and
Mississippi filled with workers who have no housing. The Mississippi
Immigrant Rights Alliance told NCLR at one point that they were
organizing a food drive so that workers who hadn’t been paid could at
least eat. NCLR’s affiliate, Latino Memphis, reports that dozens of
workers who traveled hundreds of miles from Tennessee to the Gulf
Coast for jobs came back without the wages they had been promised.
Another affiliate, CASA of Maryland, filed a lawsuit last week on
behalf of workers who had been abused by employers in the Gulf.
This is not an invisible phenomenon. Major media outlets like the New
York Times, Washington Post and Los Angeles Times, as well as the
incredible coverage provided by media in Louisiana and Mississippi,
have extensively documented the issue. So how can Governor Blanco not
know that it is happening? Are immigrants so invisible even as they
play a major role in rebuilding New Orleans?
Governor Blanco isn’t alone. At a meeting last week the U.S.
Department of Labor, the government agency responsible for protecting
workers’ rights, also told us that they weren’t aware of the scope of
the problem. They couldn’t tell us how many workers have filed claims
with their agency, or what happens to the claims once they have been
filed. With large numbers of immigrant workers and evidence of
large-scale abuse, the Department has exactly one bilingual staff
person in Mississippi, and one bilingual trainee for the whole state
of Louisiana. They have no plans to dedicate additional resources to
deal with the crisis for workers in the Gulf. It’s as if we are as
invisible to the agency as we are to Governor Blanco.
But immigrants aren’t invisible, because they are being attacked
nearly every day on the television and radio airwaves by pundits like
Lou Dobbs and Bill O’Reilly, who are angered that they do so much hard
work in this country. You can hardly turn on your television without
seeing someone yelling their outrage about day labor centers or
immigrants in general.
What is happening in the Gulf Coast is an exaggerated version of what
happens around the country. We benefit from immigrants’ hard work, but
we are unwilling to respect their rights or see to it that these are
properly enforced. We allow immigrants to work in our country’s most
dangerous jobs, yet we deny them access to care or compensation when
they are injured. Then we attack them on the airwaves for being here
at all.
I’m familiar with that story. But it still surprises me when the
people who are supposed to be leading our country fail to see it as
well.
Cecilia Munoz is vice president of the National Council of La
Raza’s Office of Research, Advocacy and Legislation.
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http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=6b3514de6c6d3fb441c8b551aa6e361e
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