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Immigration See other Immigration Articles Title: mericans Apply for Jobs at Koch Foods After ICE Raid Roughly 150 locals attended an August 12 job fair to apply for jobs at the Koch Foods plants in Mississippi. The fair was run after the August 7 removal of 243 alleged illegal migrants in two of the companys chicken processing plants, according to local authorities. The local Jackson Clarion-Ledger newspaper reported 25 to 30 people went to the job fair in Forest, Mississippi. The report said: Kamerio Whitley, a resident of the nearby town of Morton, spoke to reporters after he left the building. He said there were several positions available at the plant, including forklift operators. Whitley said he applied for a job working at the plants rehang table, where workers hang frozen chickens. The job starts at $12 an hour, which is decent pay for the area, Whitley said. Thats not bad to start, and it can always go up, he said. The company is also trying to hire workers with online ads. Local officials made sure the hiring process complied with federal hiring regulations, according to WAPT 16. Koch Foods is not part of the Koch brothers network of energy companies. By 10 a.m., a crowd of dozens was on hand
Most were black and spoke with accents from the American South. A few appeared white or Hispanic, AP reported. The news service continued: The 25-year-old [Eddie Nicholson] has worked in chicken plants before and was considering a return, but wanted to see if wages had gone up. Plants in recent years have typically paid $11 to $12 an hour, according to labor statistics, but Nicholson said he wants $15 an hour. Like Nicholson, many who applied Monday were chicken plant veterans. They understand the arduous and sometimes dangerous work of slaughtering, butchering and packaging chicken, from hanging up live chickens, to pulling off skin, to cutting with super-sharp knives, to boxing up chicken, much of it done in near-freezing temperatures. The line moves fast and people repeat the same motions over and over. Its definitely hard, said Cedric Griffith of Magee, who said hes been working at McDonalds after getting fired from another chicken processor for missing too many days. Youre going to lose of lot of weight. Nine times out of 10, when that week is over, youre tired. The areas unemployment is high, and the wages are low. From 2000 to 2009, the labor-force participation rate in Mississippi dropped by 9 percent, according to an August 8 report from Krikorians CIS. The drop from 78 percent to 69 percent leaves 494,000 U.S.-born adults out of the workforce in 2019, said the report, titled The Employment Situation of Immigrants and Natives in the First Quarter of 2019. Union chief Richard Trumka is backing the illegal migrant workers who were hired by Koch Foods and other meat packers in Mississippi to displace Americans throughout the state. We condemn these raids in the strongest possible terms and pledge our full support to @UFCW and the working people of Mississippi as they work to win justice for all those who were unfairly targeted, Richard Trumka, the head of the AFL-CIO, said via Twitter. Trumkas tweet linked his huge political switch to a Washington Post report that said that many children didnt have a loved one or family friend to go home to. Some walked home from school but were locked out because their parents were detained in the raid. Also, the processing firms have been under pressure to raise wages in President Donald Trumps go-go economy. In May, for example, Sanderson Farms offered $15 an hour wage to workers after June 2. Sanderson Farms has about 15,000 workers in Mississippi, Georgia, Louisiana, North Carolina, and Texas. About 13,000 [earn] hourly wages, AP reported. But MSNBCs correspondent Marian Atencio suggested that only Latinos can do the slaughterhouse jobs, saying, This is pretty grueling work at these poultry plants and
poultry is an industry that has become as many of these industries that rely on low skilled workers dependent on Latin American immigration. Media reports state that the seven slaughterhouses in six cities were using up to 680 illegal aliens instead of local Americans. Some of the migrant employees were wearing ankle monitors, which are placed on released migrants by the Department of Homeland Security, according to federal court documents the states Clarion-Ledger newspaper reported. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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