rich Republicans love cheap labor
----
http://www.forward.com/articles/13443/

Mounting pressure from Jewish groups and members of Congress has led
the largest kosher slaughterhouse in the United States to start
searching for a new CEO less than two weeks after federal agents
arrested nearly 400 of its employees in a massive immigration raid.

Aaron Rubashkin, the founder of Agriprocessors, announced May 23 that
he intends to find a replacement for his son Sholom as company CEO.

The announcement follows statements from three Jewish organizations
raising the specter of a boycott, the launch of a campaign by the
United Food and Commercial Workers Union, and a call from U.S. Rep.
Bruce Braley (D-Iowa) for an investigation of the company.

"The best course of action for the company, its employees, the local
community and our customers is to bring new leadership to
Agriprocessors," the senior Rubashkin said in a statement.

The Brooklyn butcher and Chabad-Lubavitcher, who founded the company
in 1987, added, "The company has begun the search for a new permanent
chief executive officer. We have engaged a team of industry experts to
help us identify and secure a new leader who can help us meet the
needs of Agriprocessors today and in the future. We will make more
information on the search process available by the end of next week."

The statement reiterated that "due to pending legal issues," the
company would not respond to specific allegations. They include
charges of hiring underage workers, sexual harassment and withholding
of overtime pay.

Rubashkin's move to replace his son comes as Agriprocessors is facing
mounting legal problems and boycott threats following the recent raid.
The company's problems have raised fears about a possible shortage of
kosher meat and fired up the debate over whether Jewish religious
bodies should take a more active role in monitoring the working
conditions at kosher factories.

In response to the raid and related allegations about the situation at
the plant in Postville, Iowa, the Jewish Labor Committee issued a
statement May 23 calling for a boycott of Agriprocessors.

The company sells its kosher meat under various labels, including
Aaron's Best, Aaron's Choice, Rubashkin's, European Glatt, Supreme
Kosher, David's and Shor Habor.

In its statement, the Jewish Labor Committee asserted that the company
had displayed "a clear pattern of employer negligence and even
lawlessness," including the violation of child labor laws and
toleration of various forms of worker abuse.

The committee's statement was followed by a "request" from the
Conservative movement's top bodies that kosher consumers "evaluate
whether it is appropriate to buy and eat meat products" from
Agriprocessors.

That same day, Uri L'tzedek, a project started by students at Yeshivat
Chovevei Torah, a liberal Orthodox rabbinical school in Manhattan,
began circulating a petition asking Agriprocessors to pay its workers
at least the federal minimum wage, abide by laws pertaining to
workers' rights and treat employees according to Torah standards.

Organizers say that about 450 people from across the denominational
spectrum had signed as of Monday.

"Until these changes are made, we feel compelled to refrain from
purchasing or consuming meat produced by your company, and will
pressure every establishment with which we do business to cease
purchase of your meat," the petition reads. "Effective June 15, 2008
we will stop patronizing any restaurant that sells your meat."

Meanwhile, the food workers union has taken out advertisements in
major Jewish newspapers detailing the allegations against
Agriprocessors. The union, which has waged a legal battle over its
still unsuccessful efforts to organize plant workers, also has
launched a Web site, EyeOnAgriprocessors.org, to publicize claims
against the company.

Last week, in a sign of the controversy's impact, a supermarket in a
heavily Jewish suburb of Philadelphia posted a sign stating that its
kosher chicken was produced by Empire, a major poultry competitor.

The store director told JTA that the market was unable to procure
chicken from Aaron's, which it had been selling for three years, and
wanted to inform customers of the change.

The May 12 federal raid is said to be the largest of its kind in U.S.
history. Of the 389 illegal immigrants apprehended, 297 pleaded guilty
within days and were sentenced to short prison terms or probation, to
be followed by deportation to their native countries.

Speculation is rife over whether prosecutors are investigating the
company itself, especially after one Postville resident with ties to
Agriprocessors confirmed last week that he had been summoned to appear
before a grand jury.

A spokesman for the local U.S. Attorney's Office would not comment on
the matter.

In Washington, the House Committee on Education and Labor held a
hearing May 20 on the raid, focusing mainly on its impact on the
children of detained workers. But members of Congress also have
expressed concern that the raids targeted illegal workers while
letting their employers off the hook.

Braley, who represents the northeast Iowa area where the plant is
located, has called for an investigation of the company.

"Until we enforce our immigration laws equally against both employers
and employees who break the law, we will continue to have a problem
with illegal immigration," Braley said. "Naturally the sheer number of
arrests made by ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] during
Monday's raid raises questions about Agriprocessors Inc.'s knowledge
of possible violations of employment and immigration law."

Within the Jewish world, the loudest reactions have come from the
Conservative movement and the liberal edge of Orthodoxy. Interviews
with some of Postville's Chabad residents and other observers suggest
that the fervently Orthodox, or haredi community, is taking the flood
of accusations against Agriprocessors with more than a grain of salt.

"The problem is, there's a mind-set that you have to give the person
the benefit of the doubt," said Binyomin Jolkovsky, the editor of
Jewish World Review and a longtime observer of haredi Jewry. "But when
12 government agencies come in and do a sting operation, and after
something that was so detailed, you got to wonder."

In the haredi community, Jolkovsky said, the sentiment tends to be
much more focused on the bottom line for the consumer.

"'They're paying people $5 an hour labor, how come I'm paying $7 a
pound for steak?' That's what they were saying," he said.

Some Jewish Postville residents refused to even consider some of the
government's allegations, such as that methamphetamine was being
produced at the plant or that the company was shorting its workers. In
the days after the raid, several told JTA that the affair was the
product of an anti-Orthodox, if not anti-Semitic, agenda.

"Many of the allegations are ridiculous, like the meth labs," said
Aaron Goldsmith, a Chabad rabbi and former Postville city councilman
with ties to the Rubashkins. "Why would somebody want to pour millions
and millions of dollars into infrastructure and let a poor man's drug
business run in a plant? It doesn't make any sense to me. It's stupid.
It's not in the interest of the company."

Goldsmith, who runs a custom hospital-bed business headquartered near
Agriprocessors, acknowledged that whatever the truth of the
allegations, the company's reputation is "in trouble."

Asked what he would say to kosher consumers concerned about the
charges flying against the company, Goldsmith paused for nearly a
minute before answering.

"Clearly the Rubashkins need to rethink a lot of their management
style," he said, "because whatever good they do and whatever errors
they made are completely perceived in a way that's undermining their
own company. To me, they need to bring the reality and the perceptions
in line with each other."

On Dec 11, 9:19 pm, studio <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Dec 11, 6:47 pm, dick thompson <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > You poor bitter man.  It is the liberals who keep them around.  What
> > republicans are there in Chicago in the first place.  That is Dem
> > country all the way.  You try to blame the Republicans for all the
> > things you do.
>
> ???
> I don't do nothing and haven't since 2005.
> But it's not just Chicago, rich Republicans love cheap labor, and
> that's a fact.

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