Posted on 01/26/2007 1:29:47 PM PST by kennedy
The 21 Smithfield Packing Co. employees arrested by immigration officials while they worked Wednesday are in the process of being deported.
The 20 men and one woman arrested were moved Thursday from the Mecklenburg County Jail to Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin, Ga., nearly 700 miles from Tar Heel.
Meanwhile, church officials within the regions Hispanic community and spokespeople with the United Food & Commercial Workers union said the workers families didnt know where they were and other immigrant workers were terrified of more arrests.
Production at the plant was substantially diminished Thursday as workers stayed away.
There are hundreds of immigrant families who will have to decide, Do I show up to work (Friday) and risk being arrested by immigration? said Eduardo Pena, a spokesman for the union, which became an unofficial hub of information for workers Thursday, he said.
The workers are going through removal proceedings, said Marc Raimondi, a spokesman with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Washington.
Because ICE officials arrested the employees on administrative rather than criminal charges, it will not release their names. Raimondi would not elaborate on whether the workers could also be charged criminally or whether other workers could be targeted.
The investigation continues, he said.
An ICE spokeswoman told The Associated Press that administrative immigration charges can include being in the U.S illegally or overstaying a work visa.
Because much of the cleaning crew didnt show up for work Wednesday night, production was lower and got started late at the plant Thursday, said Dennis Pittman, director of corporate communication for Smithfield.
We were so far behind because of getting started so late, Pittman told the AP. There were several hundred people who didnt show up.
The second shift seemed to have normal attendance, he told the Observer.
Its been a rough day, Pittman said. All we were trying to do today is get the product out the door.
Pittman told the AP the company spent most of Thursday trying to persuade Hispanic workers who stayed home to return to work, an effort that included advertising on a Spanish language radio station.
Pittman has been told union members were in the parking lot Wednesday night telling workers to leave so ICE couldnt detain them, but the union has denied that. ICE officials were gone from the plant by 5 p.m. Wednesday, Pittman said.
On Thursday, the workers were calling each other, the union and representatives from area churches.
The wife of one of the workers who was picked up started calling his co-workers saying, Dont go to work, immigration officials are there, Pena said.
Salvador Salazar, Hispanic ministry coordinator at St. Francis DeSales Church in Lumberton, said several people contacted him in a panic asking for help looking for their loved ones. One was a mother with three children.
Theyre very concerned about how theyll live, Salazar said.
Likely on the minds of many immigrant employees is whether ICE officials will arrest more workers.
We still have people thinking ICE is here, and theyre not here, Pittman said. ICE told us they got the group of people they were looking for.
If employees dont go back to work for three days without calling, We would have to replace them, Pittman said.
Not attending work is common in the region, he said.
Everyone in the area is experiencing people not coming to work, he said Thursday morning. This has put a lot of fear in people in the area. IMAGE program
The arrests stem from information gleaned about the employees since Smithfield joined the IMAGE program last year. Under IMAGE which stands for ICE Mutual Agreement between Government and Employers Smithfield must now cross reference all employees names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers and genders.
Smithfield has been criticized for joining the program, but Pittman has said the company had no choice if it wanted to avoid immigration raids. He said ICE told the company it was coming on Wednesday and said it wasnt a raid.
Immigration officials showed up in unmarked cars and plain clothes, Pittman said. The workers were then sent into a room with ICE officials, questioned and arrested, spokesman Raimondi said.
Union and church officials repeatedly pointed fingers at the pork processing plant for the arrests. Some people said the workers who were most vocal about unionization were some of those arrested.
Theres been talk of unionization at the plant for a decade.
A statement from the union Thursday said arrests are likely to continue and that ICE violated its own guidelines, which preclude the agency from facilitating the use of immigration laws of enforcement to intervene in the course of a labor dispute, the statement said.
The entire community has been terrorized, said Gene Bruskin, head of the Smithfield Justice Campaign, a national coalition backed by the union. Parents are being torn from their young children who dont know where they are. Many of these workers have given their life blood to this company for (years) and now are being summarily handed over to be arrested and discarded. It is unconscionable and continues Smithfields pattern of callous disregard for the wellbeing of its workers.
Typically, the strongest investigative efforts by ICE are directed toward companies that have made employing illegal immigrants a business model, ICE spokeswoman Jaime Zuieback said Wednesday night. But Smithfield is not one of those target companies, and she commended it for cooperating fully.
Because of discrepancies with employee records found through IMAGE, about 500 more immigrant workers are expected to lose their jobs starting the second week of February, Pittman has said. Employee unrest
In November, hundreds of workers walked out of the plant, protesting the firing of 75 employees who were unable to provide verifiable documentation that they were working legally.
After mediation with the Rev. Carlos Arce, of St. Andrews Catholic Church in Red Springs, Smithfield rehired the 75 workers and gave them 60 days to provide verifiable documentation, or theyd be fired.
For months, Smithfield has been running employee information through the IMAGE program. Each of those workers gets 60 days to provide proof they are eligible to work in the U.S.
Zuieback said Wednesday she was unaware if the arrested workers had received letters from Smithfield telling them they would be terminated.
Some mismatches in documentation are simple to fix such as proving a new last name because of marriage.
Those employees are in the clear, Pittman said. About 500 others are not because they likely wont be able to provide proof.
Because about 75 reviews were conducted per week, it will take a couple of months for all the employees 60-day review periods to expire and for them to be terminated.
The last thing we want to do is lose trained people, Pittman said. But we have to comply with federal regulations to make sure theyre eligible to work.
Self-policing its workforce through IMAGE is supposed to reduce the companys chances of immigration raids.
Smithfield will immediately look to replace the terminated workers, Pittman said.
Im hoping every one of them gets it fixed, he said.
While there seem to be plenty of applicants who could be hired as replacements, the terminations will slow production and cost the plant substantially for new training, he said.
Any employee who leaves the company on good terms and who gives at least two weeks notice is eligible for COBRA health benefits and unused vacation pay, Pittman said. The workers facing termination arent excluded from that.
Fired workers will certainly be in a tight spot, but the local economy shouldnt take a substantial hit, said Chuck Heustess, executive director of the Bladen County Economic Development Commission.
You feel sorry for the individuals, but at the same time, Smithfield would be crazy to employ illegally when the federal government is cracking down, Huestess said. Theyll find 500 new people.
Rumors were flying in the plant about the terminations before the arrests Wednesday.
What is clear is theres a lot of misinformation and fear among the workers about whats going to happen, Pena said.
Bump devolve!
The union should be charged under RICO.
That cartoon is misleading and grossly inacurate. Hillary never wears dresses.
You're right, but it looks more like a sack so that's OK!!
The problem with that cartoon is that nobody expects any action from the dems on immigration reform, and they don't pretend to want any...
To make it more accurate, it needs to show GWB and all the chickensh*t pubbies in congress. They're the ones spouting concern but in reality doing nothing.
Boo Friggin' Hoo. If they want to be reunited with the deported illegals, all they have to do is call ICE and they can arrange to provide transportation.
Mexican supremacists, crypto-fascist Greens, media shills, and cheap-labor profiteers join hands, strike up Kumbaya, scream "racists!" and cry crocodile tears for the deported criminals.
But try bringing in ten million Africans or ten million Chinese as a riposte to the illegal "immigrant rights" crowd, and you will see who the real racists are.
Let's let in 10 million Russians or Indians and see how the apostles of "immigrant rights" react to that.
The title is wrong. It should be "Scared Workers Stay Away," not "Scared Workers Stay Home," since their home is not really in this country. I wish the scared workers would GO HOME.
"Scared Smithfield workers stay home"
This headline makes no sense. If they were staying at "home," they wouldn't be in Smithfield, they'd be in Mexico or whatever.
It's parody. You need to make one of the pubbies.
What does the union care? Illegal dues spend just as well as legal dues. In fact better because chances are they will be arrested and deported meaning the Union will not have to cough up his pension money.
Perhaps I'm naive, but - assuming that you ARE here legally - isn't it fairly easy to prove that you're here legally? 60 days seems a but excessive - even replacing a lost Soc Sec card can't take that long.
That's assuming that the workers are on the books. A BIG assumption.
From my limited understanding of - for instance - the roofing industry, "questionable" workers are paid cash - no insurance, no worker's comp needed. You get hurt? Too bad. Plenty more workers where you came from.
When those costs are taken out of the mix, it makes it hard for an honest employer to compete. That's why I think that the ICE agents are going after the wrong people. So they deported 21. There's still millions to go. BUT - if they go after the employer that hired these illegals - now that's hitting them where it hurts.
Going by the sound of the article, IMHO, there's no way management could NOT know what's going on. This isn't just a college student that overstayed their visa. When this many people are involved, it's a conscious decision to hire illegals and those involved need to be punished to the full extent of the law.
This is a way to deal with illegal immigration after they are here. So what is wrong with policing the borders to prevent illegal immigration in the first place?
Packing houses in the midwest have many immigrant workers. It is common to have postings in the plant in Spanish and Vietnamese. Most of the Vietnamese are likely legal immigrants. What about the others?
There is protest (also healthy) solution to deal with the Smithfields and other packers hiring illegals - buy naturally raised beef, pork or poultry from a farmer and find a local butcher to process it for your freezer.
"...as cheaply as possible by paying illegal immigrants incredibly low wages knowing full well that they can't bitch and moan to authorities. So what if we are tunneling beneath the American economy further weakening the base it stands on, we provide the jobs Americans aren't willing to do and we are getting fabulously wealthy on the backs of these illegals."
"Hey, if they are going to bypass immigration laws, why can't we bypass minimum wage laws?" -Smithfield Rep.
Smithfield...another brand name to avoid from now on.
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