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The Progressive Response   26 July 1999   Vol. 3, No. 26
Editor: Martha Honey
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The Progressive Response (PR) is a weekly service of Foreign Policy in
Focus (FPIF), a joint project of the Interhemispheric Resource Center and
the Institute for Policy Studies. We encourage responses to the opinions
expressed in PR. 
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Table of Contents

*** THE LIMITS OF IMMIGRATION POLICY ***
By Rachael Kamel, American Friends Service Committee

*** FROM INDENTURED "GUESTS" TO NATURALIZED WORKERS ***
By Jonathan Brier, CAUSA

*** THE CAMPAIGN FOR MIGRANT DOMESTIC WORKERS RIGHTS ***
By Stephen Fried, Institute for Policy Studies
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(Editor's note: The Foreign Policy In Focus project has found that U.S.
immigration policy is one of the most contentious and divisive issues for
the progressive community. Unless one supports open borders with no
immigration restrictions, there is a lack of clarity over what should be
the parameters and principles of a just and sustainable U.S. immigration
policy. One of the earliest briefs our project published was David Stoll's
"The Immigration Debate" (vol. 2, no. 31, available at:
http://www.foreignpolicy-infocus.org/briefs/vol2/v2n31imm.html) in which he
proposed certain restrictions and checks on immigration. Because of the
opposition this brief generated, we asked a number of organizations to
critique it and lay out their proposals for a sane U.S. immigration policy.
Unfortunately, the papers we received were disappointing because, while
they criticized Stoll's brief, they failed to elaborate on either the broad
dimensions or specifics of an alternative policy. The one exception was the
well-argued paper written by Rachael Kamel of the American Friends Service
Committee. Even though this piece is now almost two years old and has not
been updated, we still find its policy framework a useful contribution to
the immigration debate.

We are coupling this with essays outlining two current campaigns, one based
in Oregon and the other in Washington, D.C., involving particular
categories of immigrants. One, by Jonathan Brier of CAUSA, argues that the
H-2A guestworker program that brings in migrant agricultural laborers
should not be expanded because it is being used to replace domestic
laborers and ratchet down wages. The other essay, by Stephen Fried of the
IPS-based Campaign for Migrant Domestic Workers Rights, argues for the
preservation of the A-3 and G-5 visa categories that bring in household
workers for diplomats and international civil servants. Because these visas
are among the only avenues for poor women from developing countries to
legally enter the U.S., the Campaign believes they should continue to
operate, but that U.S. labor law protections must be enforced and
strengthened . 

We hope that these essays will help to stimulate a wider debate on
immigration issues and we welcome your reactions and comments. )


*** THE LIMITS OF IMMIGRATION POLICY ***
By Rachael Kamel, American Friends Service Committee

What is immigration policy good for? What is its appropriate scope of
action, and what phenomena lie beyond its reach? We at the American Friends
Service Committee (AFSC) believe that these fundamental questions must be
addressed before it is possible to evaluate any given policy.

The 1990s have been marked by many complex geopolitical and economic
transformations. Among these are the emergence of the United States as the
world's sole remaining military superpower, the rapidly accelerating
integration of global markets, and unprecedented deregulation of the global
movement of capital.

Such phenomena are related to the widening gap between rich and poor on a
global scale (both within and between nations), a marked increase in
environmental degradation, a decline in food security throughout the
developing world, and a parallel decline in living standards and economic
security for working people in advanced industrial countries. Some of these
are twenty and thirty year trends that only now have entered into broad
public awareness in the U.S., while others have been sharply intensified
over the past decade, and all are linked together through intricate webs of
causation and interaction.

A worldwide increase in displacement and migration, including increased
labor migration to the U.S., is also part of this web. Yet none of these
phenomena, including migration, are susceptible to control through
immigration policy. We believe that the entire debate over whether to
restrict, where to restrict, and how to restrict immigration hugely misses
the mark.

What policy can determine, in large measure, is the conditions under which
immigration will take place. How much or how little of it will be
clandestine and fraught with risk? How many political refugees will be
turned away at ports of entry, without ever having the opportunity to go
before a judge? How many border crossers will drown in the Rio Grande or
die of exposure in the Arizona desert? How many undocumented workers will
be too fearful to report violations of wage and hour laws or to join in
union organizing campaigns? Here, we believe, the weight of all of the
arguments--both economic and humanitarian--falls on the side of respect for
human rights and dignity as a non-negotiable plank in any progressive
platform.

There is a corollary question for all of us, immigrant and native-born
alike: how many of our democratic rights and freedoms will we trade away in
exchange for spurious schemes to stop "illegal" immigration and
international drug trafficking? (Or in exchange for not unrelated and
equally spurious promises to "get tough on crime" and "end welfare
freeloading"?) In each case, the supposed benefit never arrives, but the
bitter costs, which fall most heavily on the most vulnerable, are cemented
in place.

We would applaud some points and take issue with others in David Stoll's
piece, "The Immigration Debate." But our most fundamental disagreement is
with his willingness to enter into a form of horse-trading in which we
believe immigrants can only lose. Stoll argues that advocates should "give
serious consideration to the national labor identification card," which he
offers as a measure that would deflate the political pressure for
militarizing the Mexican border. To our minds, this is tantamount to
arguing that you can strengthen human rights in one arena by reducing them
in another. It may sound plausible in a briefing paper, but in practice
it's unworkable. 

It is instructive, in this regard, to consider the experience with employer
sanctions, which were mandated by the Immigration Reform and Control Act of
1986. It has been widely documented, including by such agencies as the
General Accounting Office (GAO), that employer sanctions resulted in a
sharp increase in employment discrimination against people whose names,
accents, or appearances were perceived to be foreign. There is equally
broad agreement, likewise, that employer sanctions did not result in any
decrease in the entry of undocumented workers into the U.S. labor market.
Finally, the U.S. experience is echoed on a global scale: according to
researcher Saskia Sassen, employer sanctions have failed to achieve their
stated goal in every country that has tried them. Worker verification ups
the ante of repression for a policy that has already been shown to be
unworkable.

Stoll couples his call for a labor ID system with calls for "rigorous
enforcement of labor laws" and protection for "the basic human rights of
all U.S. residents, legal or not." Yet such a system would inevitably
result in a dramatic increase in violations of labor laws and other human
rights, because it would foster an underground labor market in which
undocumented workers would have no recourse when faced with unscrupulous
and exploitative employees. 

We think that Stoll is also mistaken in the opposition he sets up in his
piece between "labor advocates and environmentalists" on one hand, and
"religious activists, humanitarians, and civil libertarians," on the other.
Our commitment to human rights is guided not only by our spiritual and
ethical values, but also by our understanding of labor market economics.
Simply put, wages and working conditions for those at the bottom of the
heap--which is where most immigrants are situated--form a floor for all
working people. The lower the floor, the more conditions are depressed for
everybody. The more immigrant workers are forced into conditions of
clandestinity, the greater will be the downward pressure on the entire
spectrum. 

There have always been tendencies in the labor movement that have sought to
defend the prerogatives of more privileged workers against "competition"
from the less privileged--whether immigrants, women, or native-born people
of color. Likewise, there have always been countervailing tendencies that
have worked to build solidarity among all working people, across barriers
of race, gender, and nationality. Horizontal hostility, ethnic tensions,
and divisions among marginalized communities are realities that must be
addressed and ultimately overcome - not enshrined in differential treatment
in legislation.

Some of labor's most dynamic representatives--including unions like UNITE,
SEIU, or HERE--have recognized that immigrants, like women workers and
those drawn from native-born communities of color, represent the hope and
the future of the U.S. labor movement. At the same time, it is also true
that the AFL-CIO has yet to reverse its official support for employer
sanctions [AFL-CIO says it has now stepped back from its proposition of
support and has criticized employer sanctions as being discriminatory].
There is no single "labor" view on immigration policy, because this, too,
is a site of contention and change. 

Finally, we come to the question: what positive alternatives does the
Service Committee advance? AFSC, of course, is not primarily a policy
advocacy group; our efforts focus on community-based movements for social
change. When we see policies that will do great harm to the communities we
work with, we oppose them. When we see specific openings to advocate for
constructive changes, we take advantage of them--in partnership with the
affected communities. We have called, for instance, for the extension of
the 245(I) program, which facilitates family reunification; for a permanent
amnesty for Central American refugees; and for an end to military patrols
at the U.S.-Mexico border (which, following the fatal shooting in April
1997 of a Texas teen, were suspended by the Pentagon). We also work
continually at many levels to advocate for greater accountability by
immigration officials.

We believe immigrants should be protected by the same basic human and
constitutional rights available to all people in the United States, whether
or not we think such a stance will fly in Washington. We do so both because
of our deeply held values regarding the infinite worth of human life and
because of our considered conviction that basic change is made possible
primarily through social struggle.

Rachael Kamel is in the Community Relations Division of the American
Friends Service Committee, where she served as coordinator of the
Mexico-U.S. Border Program from 1995 to 1997.
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*** FROM INDENTURED "GUESTS" TO NATURALIZED WORKERS ***

(Once again, Congress is considering H-2A guestworker legislation to set
forth conditions under which foreign contract agricultural workers can be
brought into the United States. Over the coming days, H-2A legislation may
be included in several major appropriations bills, including USDA,
Commerce, Justice, and/or State. For more information on the proposed guest
worker amendments and for sample letters to Congress, see the website for
the National Clearinghouse on Agricultural Guest Worker Legislation at:
http://www.crlaf.org/legislat.htm)

*** Foreign Contract Labor: From Indentured "Guests" to Naturalized Workers
***
By Jonathan Brier, CAUSA
Contract labor historically has been used by U.S. agribusiness to
oversupply growers' labor needs in order to maintain depressed wage rates
for agricultural workers. The Bracero Program (Public Law 78), from 1942 to
1964, established a framework in which corporate farm interests could
import temporary contract laborers from Mexico under severely exploitative
conditions based on fraudulent claims of domestic labor shortages. Founded
in response to a field labor shortage brought on by World War II, the
program mandated that growers were to calculate how many workers they were
lacking, receive certification from the Department of Labor, and then abide
by a set of standards governing employer participation. Legally, growers
could not displace domestic workers through use of the program. 

However, in practice, growers got together in associations and decided at
what level the prevailing wage would be set for a particular harvest, ran
domestic workers off the jobsite through paltry wages (and often outright
intimidation), and then wildly overestimated their "labor shortages" for
the coming season. While domestic workers were being replaced, braceros
were facing underemployment, bad earnings, deductions from wages, bad food,
overcharges, improper records, dangerous work conditions, and sometimes
violence from employers.

Despite periods of intense work stoppages and strikes among braceros,
division between braceros and domestics (combined with the transience and
vulnerability of the bracero to dismissal) rendered these efforts
ineffectual and allowed the program to continue unabated until a broad
social movement generated enough political pressure to end it. Ultimately,
growers turned to other sources of temporary immigrant labor, including the
H-2 program, whose provisions were similar to the easily-circumvented
bracero regulations--until they were strengthened in 1986. 

As part of the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act, the H-2 program
became the H-2A program and labor standards required for certification were
further strengthened. Regardless of their strength on paper, these
protective standards are regularly and easily circumvented by guestworker
employers. Jamaican cutters working under H-2A temporary contracts for
Florida sugar plantations in the 1980s and early 1990s lived in abysmal
housing, were paid sub-minimum wages or had earnings stolen by employers,
and often suffered threats of retaliatory firings and/or physical violence.
Guestworkers have faced similar conditions picking apples on the East
Coast, laying irrigation pipelines in Montana and herding sheep in Idaho. A
recent study found that Oregon's second largest nursery, J. Frank Schmidt &
Son Co., circumvented fair recruitment procedures in its application for
H-2A certification, including discouraging qualified women applicants,
failing to offer housing, and failing to advertise real wage rates for
higher-paid jobs. Complaints expressed by nursery employees point to a wide
range of additional violations of workers' rights, while threats by a
company-employed "labor relations consultant" have stifled employee
complaints through fomenting workers' fear of retaliation. The larger
picture of domestic workers being forced out through stagnant or degraded
conditions and a growing climate of retaliation signify the fundamental
imbalance that has been created with a workforce segregated between
temporary foreign contract employees and domestic workers.

Recently western growers and politicians (primarily from Oregon) launched a
campaign to reform and expand the H-2A guestworker program (mostly Mexican
workers), predicated on false assumptions about potential widespread labor
shortages. Congressional attempts, led by a bipartisan effort by Oregon's
representatives including Senator Ron Wyden, a liberal Democrat, to expand
use and roll back protective provisions of the H-2A guestworker program
effectively seek to guarantee growers a vulnerable, artificially cheap, and
unorganized workforce. 

Claims of an impending labor shortage were forcefully debunked in a
December 1997 General Accounting Office (GAO) study that concluded that
there is no present nor foreseeable future shortage of agricultural
workers, and that there is in fact, according to the Department of Labor, a
substantial farm labor surplus. Unions contend that growers' predictions of
possible worker shortages come at a time when organized farm labor has been
winning contracts in California, Oregon, Washington and other major
agricultural states, and that such efforts are intended to halt these
victories. Farmworker advocates and community organizations throughout
Oregon have repeatedly advised Wyden not to support any new guestworker
legislation.

In light of the dismal record of H-2A employers' respect for workers'
rights and the probable negative impacts of new attempts to expand and
rollback the H-2A program, U.S. policymakers should pursue a more
constructive agenda based on the following objectives:

* No new guest worker program should be considered. Protective regulations
exist already in the H-2A program; implementation and enforcement of the
current law should be strengthened.

* In order to restore them to 1986 levels, real wages must be increased by
20 percent. Farmworkers' earnings should be based on a living wage: the
current base level of pay (Adverse Effect Wage Rate) should be adjusted to
reflect a just wage for farmworkers. In the unlikely event of a shortage of
workers, agricultural employers should raise wages to attract domestic
workers like any non-agricultural employer.

* Employers should be required to offer transportation cost advances to
domestic workers (who often lack sufficient funds to reach the job site)
which would be repaid from a worker's salary. 

* Every H-2A employer should be required to offer family housing regardless
of the current prevailing practice. The use of housing allowances, which
are no guarantee of adequate shelter at all, should be eliminated.

* More enforcement personnel should be added in the Wage and Hour division
of the Department of Labor, whose mandate to investigate violations of
workers' rights of its own accord should be strengthened.

* Contract labor should be done away with in favor of inviting immigrants
into the country when there are shortages of domestic workers. These
immigrants should be afforded the opportunity to obtain legal permanent
resident status and/or to naturalize as citizens. Temporary labor programs
such as H-2A rule out any possibilities for improvements in child care,
wages, and housing as growers are allowed to bypass domestic workers in
favor of a foreign labor market. Employers should be made to compete in the
domestic labor market so that improvements in wages and working conditions
can become possible.

Jonathan Brier is research coordinator and field organizer for CAUSA, an
Oregon-based coalition for immigrants' rights.

For More Information on Guestworkers: 

United Farmworkers of America
Website: http://www.ufw.org

Farmworker Justice Fund
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste (PCUN)
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: http://www.pcun.org

California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation, Inc.
Website: http://www.crlaf.org

Oregon Law Center
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

CAUSA
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~or~ [EMAIL PROTECTED]

National Council of La Raza 
Website: http://www.nclr.org

National Clearinghouse on Guestworker Legislation 
Website: http://www.crlaf.org/gworkers.htm
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*** THE CAMPAIGN FOR MIGRANT DOMESTIC WORKERS RIGHTS ***
Empowering the Powerless: The Campaign for Migrant Domestic Workers Rights
By Stephen Fried, Institute for Policy Studies

On July 15, the New York Times reported that Ifeoma and Prosper Udogwu, a
Nigerian couple in Elmsford, NY, were arrested for allegedly enslaving and
physically abusing for nine years a Nigerian teenager. Despite the
widespread shock and disbelief that such a situation could exist, the
Udogwu case in fact represents only the most recent example of domestic
worker abuse, which usually remains hidden behind the closed doors of
private homes. For the past two years, the Institute for Policy Studies,
through its Campaign for Migrant Domestic Worker Rights, has been heading a
coalition of organizations in the Washington, D.C. area to end such abuses
by diplomats and employees of international agencies. 

The Campaign grew out of a May 1995 cover story in the Washington City
Paper by Foreign Policy In Focus co-director Martha Honey. The
investigative piece documented the existence of domestic "slavery" by some
of Washington's most privileged international civil servants and described
a "modern-day Underground Railroad"--a loose network of churches, social
service groups, lawyers and individuals--quietly helping scores of
domestics escape exploitative and often abusive situations, get legal help,
and find other employment. The Campaign, launched in September 1997 by the
women at IPS, has now grown into a broad and vocal coalition of lawyers,
social service providers, unions, human rights groups, ethnically-based
centers, activist organizations, and religious groups working to set up a
system to monitor and provide protections for this vulnerable migrant
domestic labor force, provide them information about their legal rights,
and hold the employers and institutions involved accountable for abuse.
Most of these domestic workers are poor women from developing countries in
Africa, Asia, and Latin America who come to the U.S. (mainly Washington and
New York) on special A-3 and G-5 visas, to work in the homes of diplomats
and officials of the World Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF), United
Nations, and other international organizations. These special visa
categories--A-3s for household employees of diplomats and G-5s for
employees of international agency officials--include cooks, drivers,
nannies, housekeepers, gardeners, and other personal servants who prop up
and provide the underpinning to support their life styles. In 1998, 3,762
A-3 and G-5 visas were issued, with the largest numbers coming from the
Philippines (22.3%), Indonesia (8.1%), Peru (5.6%) and India (4.8%). 

The Campaign has found that there is a pattern to the abuse of G-5 and A-3
workers that usually begins at the point of arrival in the United States.
The employer frequently demands that the worker hand over her passport, the
contract (if there is one), and other legal papers "for safe keeping." In
practice, an employer uses the possession of these documents to maintain
control and sometimes forces the worker to sign a new contract, stipulating
longer hours and less pay. Exploitative employers also typically tell the
worker that she may not use the telephone, make contact with her
"compatriots" in the area, or leave the house alone. Without documents,
local contacts, or knowledge of her legal rights under U.S. law,
domestics--who frequently do not speak English and may be
illiterate--simply put up with a bad situation. If allowed out at all, it
is usually to attend church, and for this reason churches in the Washington
area have often been the first place where abused domestics have sought
help. One Catholic sister has files of several hundred G-5 and A-3 workers
she has assisted, dating back to the mid-1970s. 

Cases of exploitation have involved domestic workers forced to work six or
seven days a week, often from sun-up to late at night, for $300 or less per
month. This is a far cry from the current minimum wage of $5.15 per hour,
to which domestics are entitled. In several instances, workers have been
forced to work for years with no pay at all. Violations may extend to far
more horrific physical, sexual, and psychological abuse, including the case
of a Filipina woman whose employer forced her to wear a dog collar and
sleep outside with the family's dogs. A worker from Malawi was forced to
sleep on a piece of cardboard in the basement and bathe outside using a
bucket of cold water. In several cases, domestic workers were also forced
to run illegal daycare centers in their employers' homes. 

Live-in domestic workers inherently occupy a gray space in terms of labor
rights. The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), the great arbiter of all
things labor-related, only exacerbates this middle-ground phenomenon. For
instance, while the FLSA requires that domestic workers be paid at least
the minimum wage, domestic workers who live with their employers, unlike
other workers, are not entitled to overtime pay. The FLSA also states that
"[i]n meeting the wage responsibilities imposed by the Act, employers may
take appropriate credit for the reasonable cost or fair value?of food,
lodging and other facilities customarily furnished to the employee by the
employer," yet nobody monitors how much the employer deducts from the
worker's wages in the name of food and lodging. The Campaign seeks to
ensure that U.S. labor laws and other legal guarantees are enforced and
strengthened; it does not want the A-3 and G-5 visa categories cancelled
because these programs are among the few ways that poor workers from
developing countries can legally enter and work in the United States. 

The Campaign is working on a two-pronged effort to expose, challenge, and
try to end this form of domestic slavery. On the one hand, it is involved
in negotiations with the World Bank and IMF (which together currently have
about one thousand G-5's employed by their staffs) to get these
institutions to tighten up their monitoring of the program and take action
against abusers. In addition, the Campaign is embarking on a grass-roots
organizing effort to inform and empower A-3 and G-5 domestics and set up a
more organized network to provide social services and legal help to abused
G-5 and A-3 workers. This includes the publication of a booklet, The Legal
Rights and Resources Available to G-5 and A-3 Domestic Workers, to be
distributed in several languages throughout the D.C. metropolitan area.
Only through this dual effort, combining pressure to the top with
empowerment at the bottom, can we hope to stop the abuse and exploitation
of this hidden community. 

Stephen Fried is working this summer on the Campaign for Migrant Domestic
Workers Rights at the Institute for Policy Studies. He is entering his
sophomore year at Stanford University.
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