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Day laborer center opens in Herndon
Potomac News ^ | Thursday, December 15, 2005 | DANIEL GILBERT

Posted on 12/15/2005 3:23:44 AM PST by chambley1

The opening of a formal center for day laborers in Herndon on Wednesday brought a new fervor to a debate that has raged since August, drawing roughly as many demonstrators as laborers to the site.

Even before sunrise, demonstrators had installed themselves at the perimeters of the Herndon Official Workers Center at 1481 Sterling Road. Two ideologically opposed groups stood intermingled: those protesting the center, and those protesting the protesters.

The demonstrators, bracing themselves against temperatures in the low teens, did not at first verbally confront each other, letting the battle play out in the air above them.

“Change Your Name, You’re Still The KKK,” read one anti-protester banner. “Right To Work = Right To Eat,” read another.

“Enforce Immigration Laws,” protester pickets answered back. “Help Save Herndon.”

Within earshot of Minutemen supporters, one demonstrator called the anti-illegal alien group “misguided.”

“They think immigrants are taking jobs from U.S. workers, but those jobs are being shipped overseas,” said Mike Benson, a Washington, D.C., resident, who makes a living as a day laborer.

But employment is not the issue that brought Bob Rudine, a member of “Help Save Herndon,” to picket and photograph in the numbingly cold weather.

“Increased crime, the MS-13 gang, public drunkenness and urination” are some of the detrimental effects Rudine attributes to a heavy day laborer presence in Herndon.

“We’re non-violent. At least we’re trying to be. I don’t know how long that will last,” said Rudine, who assists the Minutemen by photographing those who hire day laborers.

And at times, the tension boils over.

“You’re racists, infecting our town, trying to deny people the right to feed their families,” Lila McDowell, a member of an activist group supporting the center, yelled at a man holding an “Enforce Immigration Laws” banner.

Rudine and the other protesters said little in response, training their video cameras on their detractors.

Diane Bonieski, an opponent of the workers center, noted that many of the anti-Minutemen picketers were out-of-towners.

“We’re from Loudoun and Herndon. They’re from D.C. That speaks volumes,” Bonieski said as she fumbled with a cigarette lighter, trembling from the cold. “We really need a heater out here.”

FORMALIZING THE SYSTEM Out of sight of the demonstrators, day laborers registered with the center, signing in at an outdoor table. Jenny Albers, the strategy coordinator of the center, wrote each worker’s name on a raffle ticket, placing the tickets in one of three transparent jugs: one for English speakers, one for special skills like welding and one for all other laborers.

The names, drawn at random, determine the order for work opportunities.

Access to a heated trailer adjacent to the sign-in table was barred to the laborers, open only for English classes offered by Project Hope and Harmony. Albers said that there are plans to build a 25-by-40-foot “picnic area” with industrial strength polyvinyl curtains. But for now, the workers have to stand outside in the frigid weather.

Few are complaining.

Instead, they are busy sipping coffee, eating bagels and doughnuts, all provided by volunteers.

By 8:30 a.m., 86 workers had signed in. Only eight had found work. Still, the atmosphere is upbeat, almost jovial.

“I feel happy,” Matias Abrego, a native of Honduras, said in Spanish. “Although unfortunately less employers are coming than we hoped, no one is going to run me off this place. I can walk to and fro in peace.

At the entrance to the center, Bill Threlkeld, director of Project Hope and Harmony, passed out flyers informing prospective employers of their legal responsibilities. Fumbling with a flyer, Threlkeld said he had not slept in 48 hours.

“It’s been busy,” he explained.

A prospective employer pulls up, the third of the morning. Threlkeld asks for details. The man, Alvin Tumibay of Herndon, is looking for one English speaker to tear up flooring for eight hours. He is offering $10 per hour.

“The police told me to come here, the police at the 7-Eleven,” Tumibay said. He added that he had never employed a day laborer before, and was only doing so because his assistant was ill.

Another employer, Bill Farrah, came looking for a worker to stack salt.

“This is the 49th day this year I’ve used a day laborer,” said the Herndon resident, with a proud smile. “I want the center to succeed. I used to be a day-laborer when I was a kid.”

A DIVIDING LINE Another dimension to the issue sits across the street from the center, where two men in a white pick-up truck keep a video camera focused on the entrance to the center.

“We are not the Minutemen, and I am not available for an interview,” said the driver, who later identified himself as Keith Fairfax, enforcement program manager for Loudoun County. “We’re here to see how the territory [on which the center is built] is being used.”

The Town of Herndon and Loudoun County are divided by a line that runs directly through the property which the center occupies. Specifically, the entrance to the center on Rock Hill Road and some of the parking spaces, are located in Loudoun.

While Herndon approved the construction of the center in August, Loudoun’s Zoning Administrator, Melinda Artman, determined Sept. 6 that “a temporary assembly site for day workers ... is not permitted on the Loudoun County portion of the subject property.”

Herndon has appealed this determination, arguing that barring access to the Loudoun portion of the facility would adversely affect its town.

In response to the appeal, Artman upheld her earlier decision in a recommendation to the Board of Zoning Appeals, stating that the “driveway and parking associated with [the day laborer center] are not permitted on the county portion of the subject property.” Lacking the requisite site plan and zoning permit approvals by Loudoun, Artman concluded the center is in violation of the Loudoun County Zoning Ordinance.

The hearing will take place at 7:30 tonight to decide whether to uphold or overturn Artman’s September decision. In the probable event that it is upheld, Herndon will have several options for the center: It can apply to rezone the property, solicit the county to amend the current zoning ordinance or close access to the site from the Loudoun portion.

MINUTEMEN In the meantime, George Taplin, leader of the Herndon Minutemen chapter, has vowed to maintain a presence at the site.

Taplin said the center was no improvement over the previous informal site at a 7-Eleven on Elden Street.

“Are [the workers] making better money? Are they getting more benefits? No. Nothing is changing for these guys,” he said.

Taplin noted that membership in his chapter continues to swell.

“Our members are now in excess of 125, and we are growing very rapidly,” he said. “New people, sometimes three or four, are trickling in every day.”

Day laborers, now out of view of the Minutemen, did not appear worried by their continued presence. When asked if he were concerned, Edgar Morales, a native of Guatemala, smiled and shook his head.

“My God,” he said, pointing to the sky. “He is everything. He protects me wherever I go.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Virginia; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: aliens; bushamnesty; daylaborers; fairfaxcounty; herndon; illegalaliens; immigrantlist; invasionusa; openborders; taxcheats; undergroundeconomy

1 posted on 12/15/2005 3:23:45 AM PST by chambley1
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To: chambley1

The people of the commonwealth of virginia voted for this when they voted for Kaine.


2 posted on 12/15/2005 3:26:37 AM PST by johnmecainrino
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To: chambley1

When are the politicians going to get it?

This looks like an organized lib idea, they oppose the Iraq war AND they are all for ILLEGAL activity in the United States how unAmerican is that????


3 posted on 12/15/2005 4:03:44 AM PST by stopem (Merry CHRISTmas to ALL!)
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To: chambley1

r 'they' checking immigration status of foreign-born laborers?


4 posted on 12/15/2005 4:33:39 AM PST by 1234 (Border control or IMPEACHMENT)
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To: chambley1
I hope all the workers at the center are diversity trained and wear a condom while they service clients. Is there a "mechanism in place" to address grievances from clients about rude staff? Was there an environmental impact study done before they built the center? Are there multi lingual signs explaining how to register and vote Democrat,of course? Is the 'food stamp info" table well stocked? So many important questions!
5 posted on 12/15/2005 5:07:15 AM PST by jmaroneps37 (We will never murtha to the terrorists. Bring home the troops means bring home the war.)
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To: chambley1

“My God,” he said, pointing to the sky. “He is everything. He protects me wherever I go.”

Thats great he can protect you on your way back home.


6 posted on 12/15/2005 5:30:25 AM PST by Sterco
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To: 1_Inch_Group; 2sheep; 2Trievers; 3AngelaD; 4Freedom; 4ourprogeny; 7.62 x 51mm; A CA Guy; ...

Since only guest workers who have a job in the US will be allowed in, I guess we won't need day labor sites after the great guest worker bill is passed, right? [/sarcasm]


7 posted on 12/15/2005 9:05:16 AM PST by gubamyster
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To: chambley1

And I'm sure that the center is paying its half of the payroll taxes and making sure that the employee's half is being withheld.


8 posted on 12/15/2005 9:26:35 AM PST by Bob Buchholz
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To: gubamyster

Protect our borders and coastlines from all foreign invaders!

Support our Minutemen Patriots!

Be Ever Vigilant ~ Bump!


9 posted on 12/15/2005 9:39:27 AM PST by blackie (Be Well~Be Armed~Be Safe~Molon Labe!)
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To: blackie
Herndon isn't the only one. The Examiner (Dec. 12, 05) reported that the Arlington County Board (VA, bordering DC) agreed to make the issue of "protecting the rights of and opportunities for public education and services of the county's immigrant population."

Until Herndon's day labor center, Arlington houses the only taxpayer-funded day laborer center in Northern Virgina.

10 posted on 12/17/2005 2:35:22 PM PST by Dante3
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