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Hispanic residents mixed on Bush guest worker program
Naples Daily News ^ | 1/18/2004 | MIREIDY FERNANDEZ

Posted on 01/17/2004 10:57:11 PM PST by Marak

By MIREIDY FERNANDEZ, mmfernandez@naplesnews.com
January 18, 2004

At 70, Mexican-born Santos Torres Lucio labors in the Immokalee tomato fields during harvest season so he can make enough money to support himself and send money back to his family.

Torres Lucio has lived in Collier County for six years and admits that working in the farm fields is a hard, demanding job that not just anyone would accept.

"It's really difficult having to battle it out for yourself in the fields," he said. "At my age, I have to work even harder. I get tired, but I do the job."

Torres Lucio joins millions of undocumented workers nationwide who are placing their hopes on a recent temporary worker program proposed by President Bush.

To critics, however, Bush's proposal is nothing but a ploy to offer amnesty and legalize the millions of illegal/undocumented people in the United States. They charge the proposal is an outright assault on U.S. immigration laws and would encourage more undocumented workers to cross the U.S.-Mexico border bound for this country.

The proposal, if passed, would allow the estimated 8 million to 10 million illegal aliens residing in the United States to register with the federal government and obtain a work permit only if they can prove they're employed here.

Immokalee farmworkers such as Vicente Junes are undocumented, yet manage to get work in the fields and groves picking tomatoes, peppers, oranges and other fruits and vegetables.

"We do a lot for the country because we're in agriculture, which is real hard labor," said Junes, 60, a native of El Salvador. "It's really hard on your body and you get so exhausted. But at my age, I can still work pretty fast."

Opponents of the temporary worker program contend the proposal would threaten the U.S. economy because companies would employ unskilled laborers to pay them less, while refusing to hire U.S. citizens.

The proposal allows foreign workers — and those currently here without legal documents — to stay here for three years if employed. Once the three years expires, they would return to their country of origin.

Among the critics is Craig Nelsen, executive director of Project U.S.A., a private, nonprofit national watchdog group based in Washington, D.C., that promotes the enforcement of immigration laws.

Nelsen and other group supporters believe Bush's proposal will hurt U.S. citizens.

"There's an assumption by everybody that the White House is being straight with people on this," he said. "They (the Bush administration) say they are against a blanket amnesty, yet turn around and offer a plan that would permit illegal aliens to remain legally and permanently in the United States. Of course this is amnesty."

At a recent Summit of the Americas meeting in Monterrey, Mexico, Mexican President Vicente Fox lauded Bush's initiative as a good step.

The National Council of La Raza, a Hispanic advocacy group, doesn't view the proposal as amnesty.

"This is just a guest worker program and we don't think it gets to the root causes of undocumented immigration," said Michele Waslin, immigration policy analyst at La Raza in the nation's capital.

The plan, she said, "is harmful for the immigrant worker because many guest workers are mistreated and they're vulnerable."

The only ones benefiting would be corporate America, Waslin said.

"This is certainly not an amnesty. If anything, it would help those employers who are hiring undocumented workers now and they wouldn't be penalized for that," she said. "Rather, they'd get a bonus for hiring cheap labor for short periods of time."

Whatever you call it, Bush's plan has drawn both praise and criticism from the large Hispanic populace in Southwest Florida.

For Jose Hernandez, an Immokalee resident who works as a painter from time to time, the proposal wouldn't help.

"Different companies hire me to paint and I don't have a steady job with them," said Hernandez, 33, who arrived from Mexico five years ago. "This plan isn't going to help people like me because I don't work for the same company every day."

Victor Grimaldo is an organizer with The Farmworker Association of Florida, a farmworker advocacy group with a branch office in Immokalee.

"We think a complete amnesty would be great," he said. "A lot of people have made their lives here. They should first have the amnesty.

"I don't think this proposal goes far enough because there are so many Hispanics who come here, work here, make a life and then they're told, 'Now you have to go back home.' This is a small step but it's not really what we need," Grimaldo said.

Grimaldo described the fear that so many undocumented workers in Immokalee and elsewhere constantly confront. The workers are aware that the potential for deportation or random immigration sweeps always exist, he said.

"People are always used to living in hiding," Grimaldo said. "They're paranoid that immigration or someone else will come and get them."

That type of scenario is all too common for Karen Caco, an immigration attorney with the North Naples law firm of Caco Law Group/Parrish, White & Lawhon.

"I have a client who is terrified of immigration walking in to work because he uses a fake Social Security number and he's terrified of getting pulled over because he's driving without a license," she said. "If amnesty were to come in, it would benefit them because they wouldn't have to hide anymore."

Some local residents don't support the plan.

"We can't have millions of illegals roaming through the country," said Anne Marie Gressani, a French-born U.S. citizen from East Naples. "They don't have the proper documents and so who knows who they are? They are trying to take advantage of the country. This is a bad thing."

In Gressani's view, if the proposal were approved it would be detrimental to the American work force.

"When you are illegal, what can you really do?" she asked. "Illegal people take advantage and take jobs from American people. Many of them probably should be sent back to their country. They are a danger. They are breaking the law."

Esteban Cabrera, a Cuban-American from Miami, delivers fruits and vegetables to Immokalee via his produce company, S.A.G. International Distributors, which imports produce from Central America.

Cabrera pointed to how the U.S. immigration system, in his view, isn't balanced because it allows certain groups, such as Cubans, to immigrate while rejecting people from other countries. He has reservations about allowing floods of people to enter and stay here.

"I believe in human rights and giving everyone a fair chance," said Cabrera, 25, "but if everyone is allowed to come here, it might overpopulate us. If you have too many people and not enough jobs, it might pose a problem."

Other residents are enthusiastic about the plan, saying it would cater to some service-industry jobs that are often hard to fill.

Penny Rambacher is a flight attendant with AmericanAirlines and a volunteer with Airline Ambassadors, a national organization that brings humanitarian aid to 20 countries.

Rambacher has traveled to Latin American nations such as Guatemala and Ecuador and seen the poverty and desperation first-hand.

"The standard of living is so low they're desperate for survival ... for something to eat, for a better way for their family," said Rambacher of East Naples. "They're going to keep coming (to the United States), whether they're legal or illegal. Wouldn't it be better to regulate that?"

Rambacher said she was a food manager in the service industry for 15 years and noted how, from her experience, it's difficult to fill certain jobs.

The undocumented workers "fill a lot of jobs that American citizens don't want to fill," she said. "It was very difficult, almost impossible, to fill a vacancy for people who wanted those jobs and had good attendance and a work ethic.

"Who do you see in the work force mowing your lawn and who are the roofers? That's hard labor — the Americans don't want it."

Guadalupe Romero, a Mexican national from Immokalee who works in the kitchen of Azteca Super Centro 2000 grocery store/cafeteria, backs the proposal.

"A lot of people are worried about deportation," said Romero, 50. "It would take so much pressure off of us. We need a steady work permit where we could work here and come and go freely between here and Mexico. That's the ideal thing."

Prisma Bravo, a 19-year-old Mexican native, works at the same store preparing tamales and other home-cooked delights to sell to the mostly Hispanic clientele.

"We come here looking for a better life," she said, "but we don't want to stay forever. We just come here to work. You always think about and want to return to your homeland one day."

Nelsen, with Project U.S.A., believes Bush's plan is all part of a bigger scheme.

"The administration says (it) is trying to reach out to Hispanics. ... We call that racial pandering and should be beneath any honorable politician," he said. "More than a political strategy, it's a straight payback to corporate America."

Nelsen noted how for years Republicans have been accused by Democrats and others of being in the back pocket of big business.

"This policy is going to do nothing to dispel that image that Republicans are for big business and will shaft the little guy," he said. "It's the blue-collar working-class American who suffers because of illegal immigration."

Bush is seeking a second term in office this year and he's merely politicking, Nelsen theorized.

"I think the calculation is, politically, they're hoping the proposal is going to die in Congress so it's not going to be problematic for Bush's base so Bush will get lots of good coverage in the Spanish-language press while ignoring the backlash in the English-language press," he said.

Immokalee tomato picker Francisco Romero defended his right to work in the United States, performing the only job he's qualified for.

"This type of work is dirty and difficult because it's so hard on you physically," said Romero, 38. "No one else wants to do this job. There aren't any Anglo workers in the fields. If we left, the Americans wouldn't do this job."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: aliens; fl; immigration
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To: Joe Hadenuf
Yeah, if you left all the stupid American's would just starve to death, cities would come to a grinding halt, it would be the end of America.

We're all going to starve on an overgrown lawn in front of a house with no roof.

I haven't heard anyone accuse these clowns of being gloom and doomers.

21 posted on 01/18/2004 12:56:38 AM PST by primeval patriot
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Comment #22 Removed by Moderator

To: Gallegos
It can work both ways. If enough people actually do it, it will send a powerful message, but if only a few do it, it can have negative effects.

I can almost hear Rove now. "Only ten people voted for Tancredo in Texas. Told you the conservatives would roll over."

23 posted on 01/18/2004 1:12:18 AM PST by Marak (Let me turn you on to Fantasy.)
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Comment #24 Removed by Moderator

To: Gallegos
Keep me posted on your efforts. I think it would be great if the numbers were there.
25 posted on 01/18/2004 1:22:51 AM PST by Marak (Let me turn you on to Fantasy.)
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To: Marak
"...The undocumented workers "fill a lot of jobs that American citizens don't want to fill," she said. "It was very difficult, almost impossible, to fill a vacancy for people...[sic]"

I am so sick of hearing this nonsense. Do any idiots actually believe this?

THE REASON PEOPLE DONT WANT THE JOBS IS BECAUSE OF THE PAY.

If someone is paid a decent enough salary then they will work.

You will always be able to find someone from an underdeveloped country whose living standards are below yours.

26 posted on 01/18/2004 1:23:03 AM PST by expatguy
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Comment #27 Removed by Moderator

To: expatguy
Just like the soviets proved long ago, if you keep on saying something long enough a lot of people will believe it.
28 posted on 01/18/2004 1:24:16 AM PST by Marak (Let me turn you on to Fantasy.)
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To: Gallegos; All
Exactly. If the employers would pay good pay wages, Americans would take the jobs. American citizens have always and will continue to work hard even before the illegals came and after the illegals leave. These criminals need to be deported right away, we need to enforce our laws, and put our Military on the border.

And therein lies the problem. The pay.

The fear tactic is that you will have to pay more for your tomatoes. And this is true. But also true is that the drain on social services will also be less.

The hidden truth that is never told, is that illegals do not pay taxes despite what anyone tells you. The are mostly paid in cash.

Employers can pay illegals whatever they want, there is no minimum wage for illegal aliens. There are no medical benefits. And so it is cheaper. Much cheaper.

Where I live in Malaysia, any family can hire a maid or servant from another country, mainly from Indonesia. The pay is less than you will pay a local to do the job but the government regulates it and there is a process that you need to go through with the government to hire a maid or servant.

Here is an example of a government licenced agency here in Malaysia ~

Maid Agency - Malaysia ~ There is a lot of good information on the site.

A lot of my friends back in the States are surprised when I tell them that we have two servants in our home here.

29 posted on 01/18/2004 1:47:42 AM PST by expatguy
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To: expatguy
You will always be able to find someone from an underdeveloped country whose living standards are below yours.

That's the part of this story that no one touches on. When they come here and work for such little money and live the way they do to them it's tenfold increase in their standard of living. Whereas for us it's cutting our standard of living to one quarter of what we have come to know. For illegal immigrants the draw is just too great.

Getting rid of the illegals will raise all of our standards of living or at least bring them back to normal. Unfortunately we have allowed the powerful in this country to dictate our needs to us for far too long. We have been turned, as a society, into automatons that do the bidding of a very few. They need these illegals because now we are starting to understand what has happened and a minor rebellion is taking place. The illegals are replacing us as the sheeple. The politicians and businesses that rely on them know that keeping the illegals subservient guarantees that they will retain power.

30 posted on 01/18/2004 6:26:31 AM PST by raybbr
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To: Gallegos
Dasenti (sp) Fox, "They are not illegals! They are not illegals!"
31 posted on 01/18/2004 6:38:42 AM PST by FreeAtlanta
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To: MNLDS; Marak
I was one of the two American roofers who re-roofed our house last summer. We approached several contractors to give us bids. Only one showed up to even look at the house and he never came back w/ a bid. Tear-off, re-roof jobs go to the end of the line when there's sufficient new construction to keep the contractor boys busy.
32 posted on 01/18/2004 6:46:09 AM PST by elli1
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To: Marak
"I have a client who is terrified of immigration walking in to work because he uses a fake Social Security number and he's terrified of getting pulled over because he's driving without a license," she said. "If amnesty were to come in, it would benefit them because they wouldn't have to hide anymore."

Didn't even Bush say something about if they committed no other crimes? Using a fake Social Security number is a felony crime --- that's felony document fraud that should get him a trial and permanent deportation ---- also driving without a license is a crime. He's using a stolen Social Security number because he's taking a job an American would do.

33 posted on 01/18/2004 6:52:39 AM PST by FITZ
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To: ETERNAL WARMING
I can go downtown in the North end of Vegas and buy any certification I want for %2-$250. They've taken over the Construction jobs here.

My buddy tells me the same thing. He said five years ago a person could make good money in Vegas in construction, but now the only ones making any money are the contractors. He tells me for the most part, the illegals have driven down the construction wages in the entire Las Vegas area.

34 posted on 01/18/2004 8:36:54 AM PST by Joe Hadenuf (I failed anger management class, they decided to give me a passing grade anyway)
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To: primeval patriot
Yeah, if you left all the stupid American's would just starve to death, cities would come to a grinding halt, it would be the end of America.

We're all going to starve on an overgrown lawn in front of a house with no roof.

I haven't heard anyone accuse these clowns of being gloom and doomers

Good point!

35 posted on 01/18/2004 8:48:33 AM PST by Joe Hadenuf (I failed anger management class, they decided to give me a passing grade anyway)
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Comment #36 Removed by Moderator

To: Gallegos
I agree. I find it sickenly ironic that Fox views crossers of his southern border as illegal, and his troops actually shoot many of the people trying to cross Mexico's lower border. Fortunately for him, the bigger border is to his north, and there, not many try to cross into his country.
37 posted on 01/18/2004 9:31:30 AM PST by FreeAtlanta
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Comment #38 Removed by Moderator


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