lframerica.com Blog

February 19, 2008

Losing Your Home? Illegal Day Laborers Are More Important

Filed under: Costs, Illegal Alien, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 4:26 pm

In yet another great sob story about those that broke Federal laws to enter the U.S. Illegally.  American’s are basically being informed that they are now responsible for the loss of jobs, money, and sufferings of Illegal aliens.  What is failed to be reported is that American’s should come first in America.

Don’t get me wrong, I am sorry that they are struggling. No one likes not knowing where the next paycheck will come from, if they will be able to provide food for their family, or if they will have a house over their head a week from now.  Something American’s across the U.S. are feeling and dealing with on a daily basis.  But I lack feeling any deep sympathy for anyone that broke into the country fully knowledgeable their actions were illegal.  I lack to feel sympathy for those that have a country to return to (since they just left it, and send money back into it), when American’s in general have no other “homeland” but the United States of America, and haven’t had any for many many generations.

No I won’t loose sleep tonight knowing that an illegal alien day laborer didn’t happen to get a construction job today while he stood at the street corner.  I will loose sleep over the American that won’t be able to pay his rent because of the illegal day laborer taking jobs from him, because they get free health care, food stamps, government aid, that allows them to work for slave wages.

USA Today 

GRATON, Calif. — The most desperate men park themselves on corners well before dawn, hoping for first dibs on jobs. Most days, no one gets dibs — no one gets jobs.

Foreclosures are at record highs, home sales are slumping and skittish consumers are cutting back on spending, all of which means contractors, construction crews and carpenters are no longer hiring. Neither are landscapers, cleaning services or homeowners.

Work, never a given for day laborers in the best of times, is almost non-existent these days.

“These are the worst of times,” would-be worker Ramon de la Cruz said recently in Spanish, noting that he had worked only one day in the previous six.

De la Cruz came here from Tabasco, Mexico, three years ago to earn money to provide for his daughter, now 5. Only a year ago, he could still make $500 a week.

But Graton (pop. 1,815) sits in western Sonoma County, which has been hit hard by the housing downturn. Home loan defaults nearly tripled from 2006 to 2007, while housing prices dropped 22%, according to DataQuick, a real estate data firm.

De la Cruz and his friends at the Graton Day Labor Center, where seven out of 70 workers might nab work on what passes for a good day, are not sure what they will do. Some have tried moving to other states only to find that workers everywhere are reeling under the fallout from the nation’s housing woes.

Not since the weeks after Sept. 11, when the entire nation froze in shock, have day laborers been in a more precarious position, according to workers and their advocates.

The more than 100,000 day laborers looking for work on any given day — already among the poorest, most stigmatized workers in the country, and sometimes here illegally — are finding themselves struggling as never before. Without the proper documents, their job options are limited to odd jobs for cash. Without those, many can barely feed themselves, let alone provide for their families, here or in their native countries.

And they’re facing more competition for the few jobs that are left. As companies in the housing and home-improvement industries have cut back on salaried employees, many of those workers have joined the day labor pool.

As a result, advocates say, more day laborers are becoming homeless, more are taking risks for jobs that endanger their health or don’t pay and more are spending their days haunting street corners, where they are resented.

“Our fear is that the economic downturn will create a perfect storm where day laborers will be scapegoated more than they already are,” said Chris Newman, legal director of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network.

In the past year, cities and states have been stepping up efforts to drive away day laborers. In Phoenix, the county sheriff began rounding up undocumented day laborers even before a state law took effect Jan. 1 punishing employers who hire illegal immigrants. In Oklahoma, a state law that took effect in November makes it a felony to transport, hire or shelter anyone who lacks the documents proving legal status in this country.

Citizens who oppose illegal immigration are taking their own action. In Houston, members of U.S. Border Watch, a civilian border-patrol group, scribble down license plate numbers at popular day labor hiring spots and report would-be employers to federal authorities.

Most immigrants here illegally will try to ride out the economic downturn, their advocates say.

“They know the situation is even more desperate where they come from,” said Rene Saucedo, an organizer and former director of the San Francisco Day Labor Center.

The Graton center, open since September, was organized after a year’s worth of community meetings, and built by day laborers and community volunteers. Volunteers hold English classes five days a week and teach practical skills.

The other day, 50 men and six women showed up when the center opened at 7 a.m., most not expecting to find work, said Juan Cuandon of Mexico City, a 27-year-old day laborer who is an organizer for the Graton Day Labor Center.

Underneath their amiable chatter, the workers were all very worried, Cuandon said, speaking Spanish. “Winter doesn’t help,” he said. “The hope is that jobs will bloom again in the spring.”

 

 

Feb 18, 2008 – Blogs4Bloggers

Filed under: Costs, Illegal Alien, News-Television, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 2:02 pm

100% Preventable! Stop The Madness!

When did it become a ‘human right’ to not be deported for 5! previous DUI’s?

Drunk Invader With 5 Prior DUI Convictions Endangers Child In High Speed Chase

A 21-year-old suspected illegal immigrant and with five prior DUI convictions pleaded not guilty Friday to felony DUI and child abuse and a slew of other charges for allegedly leading authorities on a high-speed chase with his year-old daughter in the backseat and crashing into six other vehicles.

Luis Gomez, also known as Luis Umberto Perez, of San Marcos, was arrested Monday night at Hibiscus and Sycamore avenues in Vista.

During a pursuit that reached speeds of more than 100 mph, Gomez slammed into two vehicles in San Marcos, three on Highway 78 and one in Vista, said Sgt. Cliston Hensley of the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department.

No one was injured in any of the crashes.

Gomez also is charged with felony counts of having a blood-alcohol level over the state limit of .08 percent and evading police with reckless driving, along with two misdemeanor counts of hit-and-run and one count each of reckless driving, driving with a suspended license and being an unlicensed driver.

Judge Joe Littlejohn scheduled a preliminary hearing for March 3 and set bail at $130,820, but Gomez is also being held on an immigration hold.

Gosh, if we’re lucky they’ll deport him! It’s the quickest way for him to resume his drunk driving career here in the States! I mean, he hasn’t done anything seriously wrong yet, right?

And you all well know, along with other important ‘human rights,’ the right to a tasty burrito, the right to perfectly pressed Chinos, and most importantly, the right to rack up as many DUI’s as humanly possible without being deported because you is be ‘brown,’ we wouldn’t want to be racist and deport him or anything!

New Immigration Ad Hit’s The Airwaves

Filed under: Big Business, Costs, Illegal Alien, News-Television, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 1:50 pm

46 NEWS – ATLANTA

A provocative new immigration advertisement just hit Atlanta’s airwaves.

The ad links black unemployment with the rise in illegal immigration. The Coalition for the Future American Worker paid for the spots.

Latino advocates like the Mexican-American Legal Defense and Educational Fund’s Elise Shore are concerned that making a direct link between immigrants and black unemployment is stoking the fire of racial divide.

Department of Labor unemployment rates from January show that black unemployment is highest at 9.2 percent, compared to whites and Hispanics.

A pro-American employment group called Numbers USA is also contributing to the ad.

A spokesperson said that the goal is to highlight the economic struggle among black men. They wanted to roll out the campaign during Black History Month.

You can see the ad at the link above and also on The Coalition For The Future American Worker website.

Cheap Tomatoes!

Filed under: Big Business, Bills, Costs, Government, Illegal Alien, News-Newspaper, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 2:50 am

DiggersRealm

The story below is brought to you from an English teacher and was written around the time of the amnesty push. Let us revisit how “cheap” tomatoes (or lettuce or grapes or substitute your favorite fruit or vegetable) are due to illegal aliens.

CHEAP TOMATOES

This should make everyone think, be you Democrat, Republican or
Independent or whatever.

From a California school teacher – - -

“As you listen to the news about the student protests over illegal immigration, there are some things that you should be aware of: I am in charge of the English-as-a-second-language department at a large southern California high school which is designated a Title 1 school, meaning that its student’s average lower socioeconomic and income levels.

Most of the schools you are hearing about, South Gate High, Bell Gardens, Huntington Park, etc., where these students are protesting, are also Title 1 schools. Title 1 schools are on the free breakfast and free lunch program. When I say free breakfast, I’m not talking a glass of milk and roll — but a full breakfast and cereal bar with fruits and juices that would make a Marriott proud. The waste of this food is monumental, with trays and trays of it being dumped in the trash uneaten. (OUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK)

I estimate that well over 50% of these students are obese or at least moderately overweight. About 75% or more DO have cell phones. The school also provides day care centers for the unwed teenage pregnant girls (some as young as 13) so they can attend class without the inconvenience of having to arrange for babysitters or having family watch their kids. (OUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK)

I was ordered to spend $700,000 on my department or risk losing funding for the upcoming year even though there was little need for anything; my budget was already substantial. I ended up buying new computers for the computer learning center, half of which, one month later, have been carved with graffiti by the appreciative students who obviously feel humbled and grateful to have a free education in America. (OUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK)

I have had to intervene several times for young and substitute teachers whose classes consist of many illegal immigrant students here in the country less then 3 months who raised so much hell with the female teachers, calling them “Putas” (whores) and throwing things, that the teachers were in tears.

Free medical, free education, free food, day care etc., etc, etc. Is it any wonder they feel entitled to not only be in this country but to demand rights, privileges and entitlements?

To those who want to point out how much these illegal immigrants contribute to our society because they LIKE their gardener and housekeeper and they like to pay less for tomatoes: spend some time in the real world of illegal immigration and see the TRUE costs.

Higher insurance, medical facilities closing, higher medical costs, more crime, lower standards of education in our schools, overcrowding, new diseases etc., etc, etc. For me, I’ll pay more for tomatoes.

Americans! We need to wake up. The guest worker program will be a disaster because we won’t have the guts to enforce it. Does anyone in their right mind really think they will voluntarily leave and return?

It does, however, have everything to do with culture: A third-world culture that does not value education, that accepts children getting pregnant and dropping out of school by 15 and that refuses to assimilate, and an American culture that has become so weak and worried about “political correctness” that we don’t have the will to do anything about it.

If this makes your blood boil, as it did mine, forward this to everyone you know.

CHEAP LABOR! Isn’t that what the whole immigration issue is about?

Business doesn’t want to pay a decent wage.

Consumers don’t want expensive produce.

Government will tell you Americans don’t want the jobs.

But the bottom line is cheap labor. The phrase “cheap labor” is a myth, a farce, and a lie. There is no such thing as “cheap labor.”

Take, for example, an illegal alien with a wife and five children. He takes a job for $5.00 or 6. 00/hour. At that wage, with six dependents, he pays no income tax, yet at the end of the year, if he files an Income Tax Return, he gets an “earned income credit” of up to $3,200 free.

He qualifies for Section 8 housing and subsidized rent.

He qualifies for food stamps.

He qualifies for free (no deductible, no co-pay) health care.

His children get free breakfasts and lunches at school.

He requires bilingual teachers and books.

He qualifies for relief from high energy bills.

If they are or become, aged, blind or disabled, they qualify for SSI. Once qualified for SSI they can qualify for Medicare. All of this is at (our) taxpayer’s expense.

He doesn’t worry about car insurance, life insurance, or homeowners insurance.

Taxpayers provide Spanish language signs, bulletins and printed material.

He and his family receive the equivalent of $20.00 to $30.00/hour in benefits.

Working Americans are lucky to have $5.00 or $6.00/hour left after paying their bills and his.

The American taxpayers also pay for increased crime, graffiti and trash clean-up.

Cheap labor! YEAH RIGHT! Wake up people!

THESE ARE THE QUESTIONS WE SHOULD BE ADDRESSING TO THE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES FOR EITHER PARTY. AND WHEN THEY LIE TO US AND DON’T DO AS THEY SAY, WE SHOULD REPLACE THEM AT ONCE!

February 15, 2008

Family Security Matters Begins Database of Illegal Alien Crimes

Filed under: Anti-Illegal Orgs., Costs, Illegal Alien, U.S. Security, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 1:09 pm

The Conservative Voice

October 8, 2007

One of the problems experienced by criminologists wishing to study crimes committed by illegal aliens in the United States is the lack of resources available with facts and figures.

Through an exclusive Family Security Matters investigation, it’s been discovered that crimes committed by foreign nationals, including illegal aliens, on American soil are not tracked, recorded, or reported by the FBI or the Justice Department as being committed by foreign nationals. This includes all crimes, including those committed by illegal alien terrorists to illegal alien criminals who are currently molesting, raping, killing, and murdering Americans in shocking numbers.

In essence, not only are the victims of illegal alien crime ignored and forgotten, they are not even given the dignity of being a statistic. They just disappear. FSM is creating this registry and data base to change this disgrace, because the government should be tracking this aspect of crime. Through the Victims of Illegal Alien Crime (VOIAC) data- base, FSM will attempt to correct this malfeasance.

It is to be noted that the President and Congress swore an oath to protect and defend the citizens of the United States; it is their primary responsibility and their actions, or lack thereof, are an abrogation of sworn duty making the majority of them malefactors.

In collaboration with other investigations, FSM has discovered that the illegal alien population contains a disproportionately large percentage of hard core criminals, sexual predators, and drunken drivers.

While the President and Congress have basically proposed amnesty to all the illegal aliens who are currently in the United States, for the most part they do not want to discuss or make known the massive collateral damage that many of those same illegal aliens are inflicting on the American people.

Once those illegal aliens are made legal immigrants, or guest workers, they will simply be added to the resident criminal population. FSM believes Americans need to know the full impact of such shortsighted and irresponsible folly before it is too late.

Article IV, Section 4 of the Constitution states, “The United States shall guarantee to every state in this union, a republican form of government, and shall protect each of them against invasion; and on application of the legislature, or of the executive (when the legislature cannot be convened) against domestic violence.”

Unfortunately, in our politically correct era, “invasion” and “domestic violence” are now parsed with the word “is.” Regardless, our republican principals are being ignored, our borders are being trampled, our laws broken, our sovereignty violated, and our citizens are under attack from outside peoples, foreign nationals, who are committing more and more domestic violence, denying American Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness, as well as Safety and Happiness.

As you peruse the VOIAC database and note the incredible number, and horrific impact, of the crimes committed by illegal aliens, remember that none of these crimes ever would have been committed if the President and Congress were exercising their constitutionally-mandated responsibilities of securing the border and enforcing existing law!

Also remember that you or a member of your family could just as easily be listed in VOIAC.

It is time that the American people be told the entire story and that the President and Congress be held accountable for allowing, and even enabling, these crimes to happen.

If you would like to be part of VOIAC’s efforts to report what the government and mainstream media are not reporting, contact us at VOIAC@familysecuritymatters.org. VOIAC will assign territories and coordinate citizen investigators so that we do not duplicate efforts and can more effectively bring to light the massive collateral damage inflicted on Americans by illegal aliens.

For more information, visit www.voiac.org.

July 2, 2007

Legal Immigration Workers Face Possibility of Lower Wage

Filed under: Costs, Illegal Alien, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 12:28 am

Legal immigrant workers face possibility of lower wage
By BARBARA BARRETT
The (Raleigh) News & Observe

http://www.charlotte.com/204/story/181172.html

AUTRYVILLE, N.C. –
Mario Olmos Martinez grew up in Mexico tagging along with his father to electrical jobs, learning a trade even as the work grew scarce. Sometimes his father could buy nothing but beans for the family; a day’s worth of milk cost eight precious pesos they rarely had.

Then came this year, when Martinez, 20, traveled a thousand miles to join his papa on a new job, this one among the vast sandhills of southeastern North Carolina, tending fields of strawberries, squash and melons.

Martinez climbs into his bunk close to midnight some nights, occasionally clutching a photograph of his own young family – his wife, Miriam, and a boy, Irving, a year old, standing by the car he sold for $600 to get to North Carolina.

Martinez and his father, Salvador Olmos Riano, 53, are different from most of the 12 million undocumented immigrants hiding in the United States. They have papers.

The men could have sneaked into North Carolina by way of the Arizona desert. Instead, they followed the rules, coming legally through an agricultural guest-worker program. As immigration reform was being debated in the U.S. Senate, the value of the guest-worker program was one of the few things many Washington politicians can agree on.

The tens of thousands of legal workers living on the same farms where they work and toil days that often stretch from dawn to dusk. Many had sketchy knowledge of the immigration debate.

The Senate bill would have expanded the federal H-2A program that funnels foreign workers into U.S. fields each growing season. It would have cut bureaucratic red tape for farmers.

It also would have slashed wages for Martinez, Riano and thousands of other legal farm workers. Some farmers and their advocates said the bill didn’t cut wages far enough.

The bill would have brought bring a 16 percent wage cut for workers in North Carolina, rolling back wages from the current guaranteed $9.02 an hour to 2003 levels of $7.57 an hour.

It also could have boosted longtime workers’ chances of earning permanent status and green cards.

This was what had Martinez and Riano thinking. If they had visas, they could maybe find work closer to the border so they could be closer to their families. They could find work as electricians, making $15 an hour.

Or they could return to Jackson Farming Co. in Autryville, where the men spent a day last week harvesting, cleaning and boxing 20,000 cantaloupes that would arrive in grocery stores around the state within 48 hours.

Nationally, North Carolina is the largest user of the federal farm worker program, with an estimated 12,500 such workers in the state in 2006, according to the N.C. Department of Labor. Aides to Sens. Richard Burr and Elizabeth Dole of North Carolina say wages are the top concern of farmers who come to speak with them about immigration.

Both Burr and Dole support the guest-worker program, including the proposed wage cuts. But both also voted against limiting debate, which would have cleared the way for final passage of the overall immigration bill. Dole was especially active in trying to kill the comprehensive reform deal.

For now, the wages go home. Martinez and Riano each try to send $300 home a week. Martinez calls his young wife, asks if the wired money arrived, then asks about his son, who has been suffering from bronchitis since January. He has hospital bills and medicine costs.

They think their current wages are fair. Asked about the proposed cut to $7.57 an hour, they pause and then nod that yes, that would be fair.

North Carolina’s relationship with Latino farm workers is strong but recent.

Among the earliest Latino immigrants to North Carolina were those who came into the state nearly three decades ago, following harvests north and tending acres of tobacco.

Now, as the state has become one of the fastest-growing recipients of immigrants in the nation, North Carolina growers say they could not develop industries in nurseries, Christmas trees and fruits and vegetables without foreign-born labor.

Brent Jackson, the owner of Jackson Farming Co., used to hire illegal workers for his farm. But they were unreliable; as soon as someone stopped by offering pennies more an hour, his men were gone.

So he joined the H-2A program, setting up meetings in Mexico and building a labor camp. This year he added new barracks, showers and a group kitchen.

Although the workers see a guaranteed $9.02 an hour, Jackson said, he spends upward of $13 to $15 an hour when he adds in travel costs, housing costs and workers’ compensation insurance.

By law, he must advertise for American workers before looking across the border. In past years he has had some Americans show up to work. One fellow lasted six weeks in the fields; none has ever stayed a season.

For now, the H-2A program is little used; only 72,000 of the nation’s estimated 9 million farm workers were temporary guest workers last year, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. Nearly a fifth of those came to North Carolina.

Farm union organizers say the larger legal program proposed in the bill would have helped farmers and offered workers more rights.

But the additional rights could have hurt growers and expose them to litigation, said Stan Eury, executive director of the N.C. Growers Association, a nonprofit agency in Vass that acts as middleman for the program. It charged $950 a head to bring about 7,000 workers into the state this year.

He said the wages would have still been too high under the immigration bill.

“I can’t say I disagree that it’s hot and dirty work, but we have economics,” Eury said. “Our workers see this as opportunity.”

In Autryville, Martinez and Riano ate a dinner of tortillas after sundown on a recent night. They hope to be home in October, working by Christmas on a new house for Martinez’s young family.

“I hope that he studies and that he has a career,” Martinez said of his boy. “I hope that he can do what he wants.”

June 23, 2007

Health care for illegal immigrants questioned

Filed under: Communities, Costs, Illegal Alien, News-Television, Politics, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 7:33 am
JOSEPH TURNER; The News Tribune
Published: June 22nd, 2007 01:00 AM
Washington is paying for medical treatment and health coverage for large numbers of illegal immigrants at the expense of other poor families who are U.S. citizens, a state lawmaker said Thursday.The cost of that coverage also is $15 million higher than what Democrats predicted earlier this year when they passed a law to expand subsidized health care programs for children.

“This is a program that mostly benefits kids of illegal immigrant families,” state Sen. Joe Zarelli said of the state Children’s Health Insurance Program. The $45 million the state will spend to expand that program over the next two years could instead be used to provide health coverage for other poor families who are citizens, he said.

Zarelli, the top Republican on the Senate budget-writing committee, made the remarks Thursday at a meeting of the Caseload Forecast Council, a group of lawmakers and governor’s Cabinet members who learned the state will have to provide coverage to 10,000 more children at a cost of $15 million.

While the higher numbers came as a surprise, Gov. Chris Gregoire’s administration isn’t upset by them. The purpose of expanding the children’s health program is to provide coverage to as many poor children as possible, regardless of their citizenship, said Nick Lutes, the governor’s budget adviser on health-care issues.

“Kids are kids,” he said.

Moreover, the overall impact to state taxpayers will be $6 million, not $15 million, because the federal government is expected to provide more money for a variety of health programs, including emergency medical treatment for non-citizens, Lutes said.

Gregoire, a Democrat, asked the Legislature earlier this year to expand children’s health coverage. The overwhelming Democratic majorities in the state House and Senate accommodated her by passing a law and increasing funding in the state’s 2007-09 budget.

The new law allows a family of four with an annual income of as much as $62,000 to qualify for state-subsidized health coverage.

Zarelli, the senator from Ridgefield in Clark County, essentially was saying, “I told you so.” He predicted in March that the cost would be higher than what Democrats were saying when they passed the new law. Zarelli also complained that more than half of the 48,670 children that soon will be insured by the state will drop coverage they already have with private insurance companies.

“Most of the kids are, in fact, covered by a private plan, but we’re taking them off so we can put these kids on the public dole,” he said.

Democrats, including Gregoire, set a goal of providing access to health care for all children by 2010. They have said the cost will be offset by $30 million in savings from fewer emergency-room visits that the state otherwise would have to pay for.

An estimated 635,000 children under the age of 18 who come from low-income families will have access to coverage by mid-2009, according to Gregoire’s office. That includes children covered by Medicaid, the state’s Basic Health Plan and two other state-subsidized programs.

Sen. Darlene Fairley, D-Lake Forest Park, also was miffed that the Legislature passed the new law without knowing the full cost of the expanded health program.

“A bunch of children magically appeared,” she said sarcastically.

Roger Gantz, a policy adviser for the state Department of Social and Health Services, said the higher numbers came to light after the Legislature adjourned and officials were trying to figure out how to reach the children who became newly eligible for health coverage. State officials learned they already had on file many of the families whose children had earlier been denied coverage because their parents made too much money or because they were not citizens, Gantz said.

Until then, “we simply did not know that these children existed,” he said. Many of them are the brothers and sisters of children who already receive medical coverage from the state but who previously were denied coverage because their siblings are citizens, but they are not, Gantz said.

Joseph Turner: 253-597-8436

joe.turner@thenewstribune.com

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