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Immigration
See other Immigration Articles

Title: Immigration Raid Jars a Small Town Critics Say Employers Should Be Targeted
Source: Washington Post
URL Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy ... /05/17/AR2008051702474_pf.html
Published: May 18, 2008
Author: Spencer S. Hsu
Post Date: 2008-05-18 12:57:36 by Horse
Keywords: None
Views: 140
Comments: 5

POSTVILLE, Iowa -- Antonio Escobedo ran to get his wife Monday when he saw a helicopter circling overhead and immigration agents approaching the meatpacking plant where they both work. The couple hid for hours inside the plant before obtaining refuge in the pews and hall at St. Bridget's Catholic Church, where hundreds of other Guatemalan and Mexican families gathered, hoping to avoid arrest.

"I like my job. I like my work. I like it here in Iowa," said Escobedo, 38, an illegal immigrant from Yescas, Mexico, who has raised his three children for 11 years in Postville. "Are they mad because I'm working?"

Monday's raid on the Agriprocessors plant, in which 389 immigrants were arrested and many held at a cattle exhibit hall, was the Bush administration's largest crackdown on illegal workers at a single site. It has upended this tree-lined community, which calls itself "Hometown to the World." Half of the school system's 600 students were absent Tuesday, including 90 percent of Hispanic children, because their parents were arrested or in hiding.

Current and former officials of the Department of Homeland Security say its raid on the largest employer in northeast Iowa reflects the administration's decision to put pressure on companies with large numbers of illegal immigrant workers, particularly in the meat industry. But its disruptive impact on the nation's largest supplier of kosher beef and on the surrounding community has provoked renewed criticism that the administration is disproportionately targeting workers instead of employers, and that the resulting turmoil is worse than the underlying crimes.

"They don't go after employers. They don't put CEOs in jail," complained the Postville Community Schools superintendent, David Strudthoff, 51, who said the sudden incarceration of more than 10 percent of the town's population of 2,300 "is like a natural disaster -- only this one is manmade."

He added, "In the end, it is the greater population that will suffer and the workforce that will be held accountable."

Congressman Bruce Braley (D-Iowa) said enforcement efforts against corporations that commit immigration violations have "plummeted" under the Bush administration. "Until we enforce our immigration laws equally against both employers and employees who break the law, we will continue to have a problem," he said.

Julie L. Myers, assistant homeland security secretary for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), said that to the contrary, the agency has seldom been so aggressive, including opening criminal investigations of company officials. While cases have netted only a handful of sentences for low-level managers so far, Myers said, such white-collar crime investigations typically take years to develop.

"Can we really execute a search warrant without taking any action against [illegal employment] that we know is taking place?" she asked. "Or will just taking business records through a search warrant cause illegal aliens to leave, and then we're not fulfilling that part of the mission, as well?"

Lobbyists and former officials say that in unleashing ICE, the administration is trying to "turn up the pain" to motivate businesses and Congress to support the comprehensive immigration changes sought by President Bush, such as a temporary-worker program and earned legalization. If the existing legal tools are too blunt, they said, Congress should create a fairer system.

But the pressure on employers -- whose wages and hiring practices have lured illegal workers to both large cities and small towns -- has mostly been indirect and economic: While workplace arrests have risen tenfold since 2002, from 510 to 4,940, only 90 criminal arrests have involved company personnel officials.

So far, no officials at Agriprocessors have been charged. The company, founded by Aaron Rubashkin, has a storybook history whose recent chapters have turned murky. After some of Rubashkin's Lubavitch Hasidic family moved here from Brooklyn in 1987, the firm became the nation's largest processor of glatt kosher beef, the strictest kosher standard. It produces kosher and non-kosher beef, veal, lamb, turkey and chicken products under brands such as Iowa Best Beef, Aaron's Best and Rubashkin's.

According to an affidavit filed by an ICE agent in conjunction with this week's arrests, 76 percent of the 968 employees on the company's payroll over the last three months of 2007 used false or suspect Social Security numbers. The affidavit cited unnamed sources who alleged that some company supervisors employed 15-year-olds, helped cash checks for workers with fake documents, and pressured workers without documents to purchase vehicles and register them in other names.

In addition, the affidavit alleged that company supervisors ignored a report of a methamphetamine drug lab operating in the plant. It also cited a case in which a supervisor blindfolded a Guatemalan worker and allegedly struck him with a meat hook, without serious injury.

Agriprocessors has faced other troubles, as well. In 2006, it paid a $600,000 settlement to the Environmental Protection Agency to resolve wastewater pollution problems, and this March it was assessed $182,000 in fines for 39 state health, safety and labor violations. In 2004, the U.S. Agriculture Department's inspector general accused the company of "acts of inhumane slaughter" after animal rights advocates publicized an unauthorized video of a stumbling, dying cow, and some Jewish groups attacked its worker practices.

And last month, the company lost a federal appellate court battle over whether it could ignore a vote by workers at its Brooklyn distribution center to unionize, on grounds that those in favor were illegal immigrants and not entitled to federal labor protections.

"This employer has a long history of violating every law that's out there -- labor laws, environmental laws, now immigration laws," said Mark Lauritsen, international vice president of the United Food and Commercial Workers union, which has waged a bitter battle to organize the Postville plant. The union charged that the immigration raid disrupted a separate U.S. Labor Department investigation into alleged child labor law violations and other infractions.

ICE may be "deporting 390 witnesses" to the labor investigation, Lauritsen said, adding, "This administration seems to place a larger value on big, splashy shows in this immigration raid than in vigorously enforcing other labor laws."

In November, Sholom Rubashkin, company vice president and the founder's son, wrote a letter to customers decrying "a slanderous and patently false campaign" by the union, and defending the company's record and its products as "safe and wholesome." After this week's raid, the family released brief statements expressing its sympathies to workers, commitment to customers and cooperation with authorities.

Chaim Abrahams, a company representative, said Agriprocessors is working to "bolster our compliance efforts to employ only properly documented employees" and has launched an independent investigation into the circumstances that led to the raid.

The blitz, which occurred after a 16-month investigation, began with helicopters, buses and vans encircling the western edge of town at 10 a.m. Witnesses said hundreds of agents surrounded the plant in 10 minutes, began interviewing workers and seized company records.

By early afternoon, illegal immigrants began arriving by bus at the National Cattle Congress grounds in Waterloo, Iowa, about 75 miles from Postville. ICE held 313 male suspects at an exhibit hall and 76 female suspects in local jails for administrative violations of immigration law.

Those arrested include 290 Guatemalans, 93 Mexicans, 2 Israelis and 4 Ukrainians, according to the U.S. attorney's office for the Northern District of Iowa.

Eighteen were juveniles who have been released or turned over for refugee resettlement, and the prosecutor's office would not say if there were underage workers at the plant. Of the adults, 306 face criminal charges for aggravated identity theft and other crimes related to the use of false documents. A lawsuit filed on behalf of the workers on Thursday, meanwhile, accused the government of violating their constitutional rights through arbitrary and indefinite detention.

For now, Postville residents -- immigrants and native-born -- are holding their breath. On Greene Street, where the Hall Roberts' Son Inc. feed store, Kosher Community Grocery and Restaurante Rinconcito Guatemalteco sit side by side, workers fear a chain of empty apartments, falling home prices and business downturns. The main street, punctuated by a single blinking traffic signal, has been quiet; a Guatemalan restaurant temporarily closed; and the storekeeper next door reported a steady trickle of families quietly booking flights to Central America via Chicago.

"Postville will be a ghost town," said Lili, a Ukrainian store clerk who spoke on the condition that her last name be withheld.

But Cesar Jochol, 48, a native of Patzun, Guatemala, and owner of a market called Tonita's Express, questioned whether the raid will be a deterrent. People who can afford to eat meat only once or twice a week in Guatemala, while earning $4 a day, can earn $60 a day in Iowa, enough to eat beef or chicken three times a day, he said. "You take away a hundred people. A couple hundred more will come tomorrow; they'll just go to L.A., New York, New Jersey and Miami," said Jochol, a 21-year U.S. resident.

At St. Bridget's Catholic Church, Eduardo Santos, 27, who came from Guatemala and lost two of his fingers working at the factory, said the raid was "fair . . . but it's bad for everybody. There's no work." He plans to go home.

"The problem is, who is going to do the work?" said Stephen G. Bloom, a University of Iowa journalism professor who wrote a 2000 book on the clash of cultures in Postville as Agriprocessors' Lubavitch Jewish leaders gained influence in the mostly Lutheran town. "This is a no-win situation."


Poster Comment:

This is the fourth article in a series about this one raid. So now we learn that one man lost two fingers working at a plant that the earlier articles said paid $6.00 an hour after 90 days.

When, not if, the next Depression hits, we will likely have a 25% unemployment rate. At that point there will be tremendous pressure from voters to get them jobs by sending the illegals home.

The IRS and Social Security know there are 7.5 million illegals who have taxpayer ID numbers that look like Social Security numbers but are not. If the FEDS were serious about illegal immigration, they would cancel those Taxpayer IDs and send out notices to their employers. I would give them some cash from their Social Security accounts so they can go home and tough out the coming Depression.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 5.

#2. To: Horse (#0) (Edited)

This story from ELEVEN YEARS AGO.

Obama and McCain are meeting with LaRaza as we trade posts looking to develop an even more serious slide into the illegal abyss.

The heartland's raw deal: how meatpacking is creating a new immigrant underclass.(Cover Story)

From:
The Nation
Date:
February 3, 1997
Author:
Cooper, Marc
More results for:
illegals iowa meatpackers

Tens of thousands of workers from developing countries have been moving to the Midwest to work in that area's meatpacking plants. The meatpacking companies have been luring such workers to their dangerous industry with the promise of $6-an-hour jobs, and illness and injury rates are high.

STORM LAKE, IOWA

Thirty-year-old Lauro Ibarro left his wife and daughter behind in Reynosa, Mexico, and dodged the traps of U.S. Immigration to make a better life for them all by slaughtering pigs in the mammoth plant that defines life in this northwest Iowa town of 10,000 Instead, a few days before Christmas, he met a horrible death. Awakened in the middle of the night by flames and smoke inside the small uninsulated trailer that he shared with his sister and her family, Lauro ran instinctively out into the foot of snow piled on the ground. Realizing that his two nieces, 5- year-old Karent Luna and 3-year-old Crystal Luna, were still inside, Lauro dove back into the blaze to rescue them. But neither he nor the two little girls escaped. A police report identified a malfunctioning kerosene space heater as the culprit-the same device that so many Latino working families have here as their only feeble defense against Iowa's five long months of winter.

At the wake the next evening, dusted by snow and dressed in jeans, parkas and workboots, some 200 or more of Lauro Ibarro's neighbors-- all Latinos overflowed the Sliefert Mortuary in a rare exercise of public, collective grief Sometimes only a tragedy of such proportions is sufficient to overcome the inertia imposed by the routine disappointments of everyday life lived out so far from what was once home.

The death of these three was a reminder of the precarious, undignified life shared not only by the mourners at the wake but by the 600 or more Mexican and Central American workers and their families who have come to live here in Storm Lake. Alongside 1,500 Laotians, these immigrant workers are now the majority of the work force at the world's second-largest pork factory, operated by Iowa Beef Processors (I.B.P.). And it's not just here in Storm Lake. In a sweeping regional arc from the Dakotas through Minnesota, Nebraska and Iowa, and down through Kansas into northern Texas and the foothills of the Missouri Ozarks, dozens of once lily-white heartland meatpacking communities have become the new homes to tens of thousands of impoverished Third World workers.

Putting the lie to the conventional wisdom undergirding our immigration policy, the arrival of these workers en masse is neither serendipitous nor the product of cunning smugglers. Rather, it is the direct result of a conscious survival strategy undertaken by a key U.S. industry. a plan developed and fully implemented only in the past few years.

Beef, pork and poultry packers have been aggressively recruiting the most vulnerable of foreign workers to relocate to the U.S. plains in exchange for $6- an-hour jobs in the country's most dangerous industry. Since permanence is hardly a requirement for these jobs, the concepts of promotion and significant salary increase have as much as disappeared. That as many as half of these new immigrants lack legal residence seems no obstacle to an industry now thriving on a docile, disempowered work force with an astronomical turnover.

Staggering illness and injury rates--36 per 100 workers in meat--and stress caused by difficult, repetitive work often means employment for just a few months before a worker quits or the company forces him/her off the job. (Government safety inspections have dropped 43 percent overall since 1994, because of budget cuts and an increasingly pro-business slant at the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.) When disabled workers and their families remain in their new homes, the social cost of their survival is then passed by the company to the public.

Moreover, this radical restructuring of food processing could be carried out only with the acquiescence of local and state governments, which have showered the meatpacking giants with millions in tax rebates and subsidies, and only with the hypocrisy of our immigration policy-makers, who abhor illegal aliens except when they're desperate enough to accept underpaid jobs under the most adverse conditions. "The entire debate over whether or not immigrants are of economic benefit is disingenuous," says University of Northern Iowa anthropologist Mark Grey, an expert on the restructured packing industry. "No one wants to state the truth--that food processing in America today would collapse were it not for immigrant labor."

As an added insult, these new immigrants are being left even more vulnerable by the Clinton Administration's new welfare and immigration reforms, which have a direct and devastating impact on their already fragile existence. Taken together, these economic and political factors have converged in the heartland to lay the foundations for a new rural underclass. Welcome to Mexico on the Missouri.

Bringing the War Back Home

Twenty-five years ago, when the population of this town--which bills itself as The City Beautiful--was sitting at 8,400, the government counted twenty-two minority residents, mostly students at the small Buena Vista University. Today, nearly half of Storm Lake's kindergarten class is nonwhite. With nearly everyone in town working at either I.B.P. or at Sara Lee's Bil-Mar turkey plant, unemployment here is about 2 percent. But the prevailing low wage insured that one in four families was the recipient of some sort of public or private charity this past year. Over the past decade the county hospital has seen its unpaid costs zoom ffom $129,000 a year to $3 million. In 1996 three cases of full-blown TB, the classic disease of poverty, were reported, and another 380 residents were treated for TB infection.

"Living here is like living on the moon," says the Rev. Tom Lo Van, a pudgy 34- year-old Laotian Lutheran with an infectious laugh. "Our people don't know the law, their rights or where to go when they are sick. We work, we pay taxes and we have problems like everyone else. But there isn't a single person in the government who speaks our language."

Reverend Tom is about as unlikely a candidate for social agitator as you could find. He was born in the U.S. Embassy in Laos, and his father was the U.S. mission's cook after serving fifteen years with the C.I.A.'s favorite cut-out, Air America. The only professional-class Laotian in town, the Reverend is his community's most forceful--some would say lone-- public advocate.

In the mid-seventies Iowa Republican politicians seeded Storm Lake with twenty-four Laotian refugee families, most of them headed by veterans of the Royal Laotian Army, allies of the U.S. forces in Vietnam. A half-dozen years later, when I.B.P. came to town, it hired some of the local Laotians and offered them $150 bounties to recruit relatives to come to Storm Lake. The company itself sent out head-hunting teams to other Laotian settlements in the United States, causing the Laotian population to swell to 1,500 or more--almost all of them of the Taiwan ethnic minority.

Reverend Tom takes me on a daylong tour of his flock, an itinerary with no geographical or community anchor. Despite their strong presence, the Lao have no newspaper or radio in town, no Lao "district" per se. On the edge of town two Lao-run convenience markets selling sticky rice and magazines imported from Thailand serve as the unofficial gathering and gossip point. "No one wants to rent to us," says the Reverend. "We get what nobody else will take."

Less than fifty yards from I.B.P.'s shipping depot, we visit Lao women living in a series of railroad shacks in conditions so bad that they remind me of the scavengers I once saw living in wooden huts in Seoul. Their small rooms are overwhelmed with the medicinal reek of Ben-Gay and Tiger Balm, used in industrial quantities to quench the fire in fingers and elbows pushed to their limit by work on the slaughterhouse floor.

In a walk-up apartment with a surplus army cot for a bed and discarded patio lounge as a couch, one male worker, Symery, greets us with what seems to be a permanently crooked wrist. After being recruited by friends in 1992 to work at I.B.P., he took a job cutting the meat off backbones. In his fifth month on the job, thirty days before the company begins granting its limited health care package, he slashed his palm open. He paid for the medical care himself, with the company discounting his weekly check. A second accident this past July left him disabled, he says. But I.B.P. recognizes only the reports of its own contract doctors, and they certified Symery as fit to work. The result: He has had no income since the summer. "I.B.P. isn't humane," he says. "No one worked like I did. No one could do boning like me."

Another Lao worker, identified as on, who prides himself on having worked with U.S. troops to block the Ho Chi Minh trail, is now in the same sort of predicament. Injured and out of work, with two rooms full of kids to support, he finally got his first $352 Supplemental Security Income disability check on December 1. "He has gotten it just in time to lose it again," says Reverend Tom, referring to the Clinton welfare bill provision that cuts off S.S.I. to legal resident aliens. "When the face of the poor was white, America didn't have the stomach to cut welfare. Now if you want to help, you are called a wimp, a fool. The only hope these people have is to become U.S. citizens. We're doing what we can. But many only have a third-grade education. How are they going to learn enough English?"

But Tom's greatest lament is reserved for the Laotian youth. He sees little evidence that the current plight of his people is just the newest chapter in the U.S. immigration story, where the first generation suffers but its children prosper. "This new generation is worse off," he says. "Our kids have no self- identity, no sense of belonging. They see no way out only picking up at I.B.P. when their parents leave off. No role models. Eighty percent of our kids drop out of high school."

Life Underground

At least the Storm Lake Lao have Reverend Tom. The more transient Latino community, bunkered mostly into two dilapidated trailer parks known as Little Mexico, has produced no visible community leaders. The handful of clergy and social workers who are this group's only advocates insist on remaining anonymous and low profile. This is, after all, a company town, and paranoia runs deep.

And rightfully so. Unlike the Lao, who are all legal residents, something like half the Latino workers and their families here are undocumented. Several workers tell me that valid Social Security cards--that belong to others--can be purchased for $300 to $500 and that the company does no checking. Other workers contend that I.B.P. management personnel moonlight in document-trafficking. That's a story the company denies.

I.B.P. openly admits that many of these Latinos-legal residents and otherwise- have come here recruited by the company, which has consistently used labor brokers to comb the border areas in south Texas and California to shuttle up new recruits at as much as $300 a head. A cursory look at a birth certificate or Social Security card was enough to satisfy the broker and the personnel department that the labor draftees were legal.

"The company loves to work with illegals," says 45-year-old Heriberto from inside his trailer, a few yards away from the scene of the December fire. "When you are illegal you can't talk back," he adds. Heriberto brings home $300 for a six- day, forty-eight-hour week. One paycheck goes for trailer rent. Another is sent back to relatives in Mexico. "You keep your head down and follow orders. We say you can't do nothing." Switching to Spanish, he says, "Dices nada porque la planta es del gobierno" (You say nothing because the plant is the government). Indeed. Though Latinos make up about a quarter of the I.B.P. work force and have the most dangerous jobs, Latino surnames show up on less than 5 percent of the worker comp claims filed between 1987 and 1995.

But as inhospitable as work is at Storm Lake, the average wage of about $7 an hour still trumps Mexico's $4-a-day minimum wage. Now that a migrant trail is firmly in place, the company has been able to scale back but not eliminate its overt recruitment and rely on word of mouth. As many as 150 Mexican workers in Storm Lake, for example, come ffom the same small village of Santa Rita in the state of Jalisco. There's a constant commerce of workers, relatives and friends between Storm Lake and Santa Rita. This human conveyor belt is powered by the grueling work regimen, which generates an astonishing worker turnover rate of more than 80 percent a year-a rate common to the entire industry. "Perfect for the company," says Heriberto. "Most workers leave before six months is up and the company has to start paying health insurance."

Meanwhile, in 1995 I.B.P. stripped off a juicy $257 million in profits on sales of $12 billion. Its C.E.O., Robert Peterson, made $1 million in salary and $5.2 million in bonuses that year. Storm Lake shows none of the blight that metastasized through the region after the eighties farm collapse. Its small and tidy downtown has no board-ups or vacancies. Four locally owned banks are thriving. The housing market is corset-tight. "You can't even rent," says Mayor Sandra Madsen. "We have two big payrolls, a stable downtown. Five years ffom now I think this town will realize we are all better off for the change we have gone through."

Perhaps. But for the moment, the dominant atmosphere is one of apartheid. "Race determines everything here," says an outreach worker to the Latino community. "Where you live, where you work, how much you earn, where you worship, even where you shop." Latinos and Laos simply steer clear of the all- white downtown area "that even I don't feel welcome in," says Reverend Tom. The immigrant workers restrict their shopping to the more anonymous Wal-Mart and the cavernous Hy-Vee supermarket on the town outskirts. When I stop to make a phone call from the local Conoco station, two locals overhear me speaking in Spanish. "Fuckin' Mexican should learn English," one says loudly to the other. The editor of the forward-looking Storm Lake Times, which has been a "pro- diversity" voice, jokes that the local good old boys like to call his paper "The Gook Times."

A lot of the local xenophobes had their big moment last May, when on a Friday afternoon seventeen armed Border Patrol officers-backed by agents ffom the Immigration and Naturalization Service, units ffom local law enforcement and surveillance planes circling over the I.B.P. plant-staged an almost tragicomic raid on Storm Lake. In what amounted to a military occupation, agents spent two days going door to door in Little Mexico, setting up roadblocks and rousting suspects off the street in a sweep for illegals. A publicity-seeking U.S. Attorney even showed up to take credit for an operation he had little to do with. Prodded into action by the local police chief, who along with the I.N.S. had built up a database of some 600 suspected illegal aliens in town, the federal agents eventually arrested and deported a total of seventy-eight Latinos.

But when hundreds of other fearful workers-likely all undocumented or with false ID-failed to show up for work the next Monday and the pork began to spoil, I.B.P. management panicked. In a story corroborated by several sources, executives started calling community workers who have the confidence of their Latino clients. "I.B.P. told us to tell everyone to come back to work that afternoon," says a social worker. "It was O.K. now. The I.N.S. was gone and nobody was going to check anything."

Within a few weeks, say several workers, even some of those deported to Mexico were back on the job. "They just got some new ID," says one worker. "And the same gringos who turned them in hired them back like nothing had happened." After the raid was over an I.N.S. official met with the press and said I.B.P. had cooperated in the raid and would face no employer sanctions or fines.

`Your Tired, Your Poor. . .'

I.B.P. doesn't like chatting with the press. But Roberto Trevino, the 29-year- old personnel director at the Heartland Company, a turkey processing plant, gave me a gracious tour of his facility a few hours up the road in Marshall, Minnesota. Five hundred workers-70 percent of them Latinos and Asians, and some Somalis, all in white smocks and caps and under the stress of constantly clanging machinery and chilly temperatures- slaughter, carve, trim and package 32,000 gobblers a day and then ship them throughout America under more than sixty different brand names, including Manor House and Janet Lee.

The college-educated son of Chicano farm workers, Trevino sees his work at least in part as philanthropic. "This is about the whole American immigrant experience. We are providing a stepping stone," he says. "We go to areas of unemployment to recruit. To South Texas: Eagle Pass, El Paso, Brownsville. If you are new in this country you are not going to be a doctor. Instead you take the jobs Americans don't want and you may not get ahead. But you do it for your kids." Yet even Trevino indirectly admits that in the restructured, low-pay workplace, there is little of the stability that we have come to associate with earlier waves of immigration. His turnover hovers at 100 percent. One of five workers is a "re-hire."

"With our workers coming ffom Texas and Mexico we realize this is not home," he says, contradicting his earlier notion of facilitating assimilation. "This is where you work."

That's not true for the 150 or so Somalis who live and work in Marshall. They can't go back. Some were in a Kenyan refugee camp on a Friday only to find themselves by the next Monday resettled in Minnesota and slashing away at turkeys. In the early nineties other Somalis had poured into Marshall ffom San Diego, where work had become scarce. But that inflow has now slowed. "A few years back there was a misunderstanding in our plant over rest periods and there was a Somali strike," says Trevino with a chuckle. "The first in the U.S. We fired them all. About eighty workers. Let me tell you, the word got out on the Somali grapevine fast. And now when they come to work here they understand what American work standards are. No labor trouble since then."

Trevino's hard-line attitude is emblematic of an industry that has reinvented itself over the past fifteen years. The bitter strike at Hormel's Austin, Minnesota, plant in 1985-86 (the subject of Barbara Kopple's Academy Award- winning documentary, American Dream) was the signal event in a labor counterrevolution that has convulsed and redrawn the face of U.S. meatpacking. And if you could boil that counterrevolution down into one slogan it would be: Death to Middle-Class Meatpackers!

Prior to the Reagan era, that's exactly what the meatpackers in Storm Lake were. The space now occupied by I.B.P. was the old Hygrade plant. The work force, unionized and virtually all white, was averaging $30,000 a year or more-- some $51,000 in today's dollars. Refusing to reach agreement with its unions, Hygrade closed down in 1981.

After being enticed with $10 million in local tax subsidies, I.B.P. re-opened the plant a year later, offering $6 an hour. The pattern of de-unionization and ruralization was regional. One after another, meatpacking plants moved ffom the big cities, where they were close to labor, into the countryside, where they were near the animals and could save on transport costs. As supermarkets took on more specialty butchers, the processing plants needed more, but less- skilled, workers. Unions became anathema. The industry's hourly pay, including benefits, peaked at $19 in 1980. By 1992 it was below sixties levels at $12 an hour, and it has continued to fall. By 1995 unionization was half of what it was in 1963.

Where the new plants opened, labor was in relatively short supply. And even in Storm Lake, where hundreds of former Hygrade workers re-applied for the new jobs, I.B.P. hired back only thirty. "The company wanted to bar union- experienced workers ffom the shop floor," says Mark Grey. With just a few companies--I.B.P., Cargill, Con-Agra--dominating the field, competition was, no pun intended, cutthroat. Production lines were sped up; injury rates climbed. What was once a stable work force became frenetically mobile.

And so it has been primarily over the past five to eight years that the industry has implemented a strategy of targeted recruitment and begun to employ methods of labor control that one group of researchers says "recall systems of peonage."

"The best hope these new communities have is that they become unionized someday," says Joe Amato, director of regional studies at Southwest State University in Marshall. "But how? How can transitory, invisible communities articulate what they want, let alone achieve it?"

With a Wink and a Handcuff

Since 1992 the I.N.S. has arrested more than 1,000 meatpacking workers in the Midwest. This past summer, as part of a six-week regional sweep ordered by the Clinton Administration,209 undocumented workers were detained in Iowa. The average pay for those arrested was $6.02 an hour. Now the four biggest meatpackers, including I.B.P. and Swift, have agreed to participate in an I.N.S. program that will use computers to check IDs.

Local Latino workers laugh it all off. "Everyone knows the company and the I.N.S. are in together on all this. They never make the company pay a fine, do they?" says Javier, an I.B.P. worker in Storm Lake who works under the ID he purchased in the name of a legal resident. "Everyone knows they are never going to arrest all of us. Who would do this shitty work for them? We know that every now and then the migra will come in and take a few away to keep the politicians happy. And then we won't see them again for another two years. That's how it works."

For more than a century now there's been a pattern of U.S. industries--one after another--actively recruiting Mexican labor while the rest of society turned a blind eye, says Fred Krissman, anthropologist at Washington State University. "You can go back to the 1920s and find all sorts of academic research in that period referring to Mexicans who could be brought here to work and then sent back home like homing pigeons to procreate." And there's always been that cognitive dissonance between the reality and the policy. "In 1954 during what was called Operation Wetback, a million Mexicans were randomly rounded up in the United States and deported," says Krissman. "At the same time we were bringing in 300,000 Mexicans in the Bracero program. We had trains running both ways on public money!"

The solution, he argues, is to dump current immigration policy and opt for the model of the European Union. When you have a system that frees the flow of capital across borders, you should move toward a transnationalization of labor, too. If you work in the United States you should have legal papers in the United States, and all such workers should be protected by serious enforcement of health and safety regulations on the books. This doesn't mean immigrant workers would suddenly make middleclass wages, but it would be the first step toward eliminating the employer abuses rained down on people with no legal standing. Most important, it would be a radical leap toward stabilizing these now-underground communities. At best, unions would have a better shot at organizing; at a minimum, individual workers would stand a better chance of raising their wages.

This is not a likely option when politicians from both parties struggle to outdo each other in cracking down on illegal aliens. Here in Iowa, where a steady stream of Mexican workers is keeping his state's industries humming, the very liberal Senator Tom Harkin has been barnstorming--even after the election--promising he will bring more I.N.S. agents into the state.

There's that great line in the movie Burn when Marlon Brando, portraying a rogue Marxist in the employ of the fictitious Royal Sugar Company as a counter insurgency adviser and warning the local plantation's overseers of trouble ahead, says something like: In times of great social crisis,the contradictions of an entire century can come to bear in a single week.

And apparently, so can social consciousness expand when put under enough stress. That's the thought that keeps running through my mind as I sit and talk with Mark Prosser, the beefy, blond, self-described "very conservative" police chief Storm Lake. I ask him how, if at all, he's changed since the influx of immigrants. "We are all prejudiced" he says, "but I really had to face and confront my biases. I don't think the people I used to work with in East St. Louis where I worked on the [police] force would even recognize me today."

Prosser proceeds to tell me that it was only because of his persistent prodding over more than a year's time that the Border Patrol finally staged its Storm Lake raid last May. With so many local residents with so much false ID it was becoming impossible to carry out even routine policing. "But you know," the chief continues, "the problem wasn't solved by the raid. In retrospect, I don't think the taxpayers' money was well spent, given the number of illegals who were here."

"You don't think enough were arrested?" I ask.

"No, that's not it," the chief answers. "I've come to a conclusion. The emphasis has to be on legalization, not arrests. There's just got to be a better way. We have to get these people into the system and get them legalized. You know, I really admire these people. Really. I doubt seriously I would ever invite a federal agency to come in again."

I leave Chief Prosser's office and pick up the paper on the corner. A headline says that the day before, in nearby Omaha, I.N.S. agents raided a city- contracted garbage hauler and arrested more than seventy illegals--about half the company work force. One shot was fired at an escaping alien.

Marc Cooper is host and executive producer of RadioNation. He wishes to thank Professor Mark Grey of the University of Northern Iowa for sharing his invaluable research.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2008-05-18   13:08:23 ET  (1 image) Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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Cow Cow Boogie sung by Ella Mae Morse

Get hip little dogies, get along...

buckeye  posted on  2008-05-18   13:15:09 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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Jethro Tull  posted on  2008-05-18   13:27:19 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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