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Houston day laborers vote to form workers rights network

They National Day Laborer Organizing Network has groups in more than 20 cities

By MONICA RHOR

Associated Press

Nearly 200 men, many wearing creased baseball caps, worn work boots and paint-spattered and grass-stained jeans, raised their hands in unison.

Do we have 100 percent? asked Marco Amador.

Si, ciento por ciento! the men roared back as one. Yes, 100 percent!

With that informal vote in a community center gym, the Houston Day Laborer Network was born Saturday, joining similar groups in more than 20 cities around the country.

It was, the men were told, a historic moment for Houston and the first step toward fighting for better working conditions and fair pay for the laborers who stake out about 29 corners in the city each morning, hoping to find work.

"You are the advocates of a new way to ask for your rights and to demand pay, a fair pay," said Amador, outreach coordinator with the Los Angeles-based National Day Laborer Organizing Network, which has helped set up many of the local networks. "Out of this, we are getting documentation of the reality of day laborers in Houston."

That reality, according to those who gathered Saturday, includes employers who often cheat laborers — negotiating one price, then paying far less or nothing at all. It is being afraid of police, who sweep workers off corners; of nearby business owners, who chafe at their presence; and of criminals and bullies, who prey on the clusters of men.

The day-laborer reality also means harsh competition for few jobs, with younger, more agile workers beating out older men or those in poor physical condition. And often, many men said, it means employers who pick up crews at their regular corner location but refuse to return them there after the end of the day, leaving the workers stranded in strange neighborhoods.

"Those are just some of the problems we have. Many, many others exist too," said Limbor Israel Dican, 48. "Violations of our rights. Demands that we do more work than agreed to. Some people don't even want to give us water when we're working."

Dican, who has worked as a day laborer since he came to the United States from Honduras more than two years ago, said he can earn $80 to $100 for a 10-hour day but often can only find one day of work a week. On a good week, he can work up to three days.

Most of that money goes to his wife and four children back home. A 19-year-old son died of cancer five months ago, but Dican, who is here illegally, could not go to Honduras for the funeral.

"I came here looking for a better future," said Dican. "But this is a hard life. One feels wounded, abandoned and alone."

Day laborer networks have proven effective in other cities, often by fighting anti-day laborers ordinances through the court system.

The next step for the Houston group is to go back to the corners and recruit more members. Leaders plan to meet again in about a month to start planning a campaign for improved conditions and a minimum wage.

The biggest obstacle may be getting other laborers to push past their fear of coming out of the shadows, said Amador. Dozens of workers from one Houston corner did not come to Saturday's meeting because they worried that the organizers were immigration agents in disguise.

"We are treated with condescension and disrespect," Dican said. "That's why we are trying to make this organization work."

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/5677684.html

"Credibility in immigration policy can be summed up in one sentence: Those who should get in, get in; those who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here will be required to leave."

"...for the system to be credible, people actually have to be deported at the end of the process."

US Congresswoman Barbara Jordan (D-TX)

Testimony to the House Immigration Subcommittee, February 24, 1995

Posted (edited)

This just shows that the pro-illegal immigration crowd are full of ####. Not only are the employers who use illegal immigrants ###### over other Americans, they are also ripping off the government and exploiting these people who they know are normally too scared to speak up..

The employers exploiting these people are the only stakeholder benefiting from illegal immigration.

Edited by Boo-Yah!

According to the Internal Revenue Service, the 400 richest American households earned a total of $US138 billion, up from $US105 billion a year earlier. That's an average of $US345 million each, on which they paid a tax rate of just 16.6 per cent.

Posted

Fine. They'll be easier to find. Just raid their union Christmas party.

"The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the U.S. Government can’t pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies."

Senator Barack Obama
Senate Floor Speech on Public Debt
March 16, 2006



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