Now more than ever a comprehensive U.S. immigration reform is key in helping rebuild our country and giving back American working families the prosperity and equality they deserve. When we allow a group of people to be exploited and discriminated against, it negatively impacts American workers by driving down wages, benefits and working conditions.
President Obama recently announced he will pursue immigration reform that would allow the millions of undocumented workers already living in the country now to “come out of the shadows.” For that to happen, they need to be able to speak up and report abuses, organize and come to the bargaining table without fearing deportation. The reality is that most of these millions of workers have already established families in their communities and are part of our society as much as any U.S.-born American.
According to the federal government, more than 50 percent of U.S. farm workers laboring are undocumented. If we were to deport all undocumented farm workers, it would mean the collapse of the agricultural industry as we know it. That’s why the UFW has worked together with the agricultural industry for the last 10 years to craft a bipartisan approach that would ensure a legal work force for U.S. agriculture.
This compromise resulted in the AgJobs bill that would give undocumented farm workers presently here the right to earn legal status by continuing to work in agriculture. AgJobs is the practical and equitable solution in addressing grower concerns about labor shortages and the insecurity that makes farm workers so vulnerable to abuse.
Undocumented farm workers possess essential skills needed to maintain the viability of the agricultural industry. By allowing them to work here without molestation, we can ensure growers have a legal and available work force, and prevent unscrupulous employers from abusing the workers.
Blog by UFW President Arturo S. Rodriguez, cross-posted from The Hill
you are doing. You’re right.
The unemployment rate at the moment is sky-high. Why would we want to continue to “employ” those here illegally? Would it be so that we can continue to exploit (actually enslave) the illegals?
It is disappointing to see the UFW taking this stand. Cesar Chavez once marched to the border with a demand that the border be sealed because the illegals would undercut his efforts. Now the UFW is trying to make the illegals legal so that they can be represented by UFW. That is not a wise move. The farm owners will continue to exploit the workers and the UFW will be left behind again.
A few years ago, the Anderson Business School at UCLA did a study to find out what would happen if all farm workers were legal, paid a living wage, and given modest benefits, such as health insurance. The one figure I remember is that the price of a head of lettuce in the supermarket would go up by ten cents.
The United States has a long history of importing folks to do slave labor. Though we no longer keep them in shackles, the effect is pretty much the same.
It is fascinating to watch the farm owners convince so-called progressives to continue to exploit the poorest amongst us and the illegals from other nations.