Rep. Smith E-Verify Proposes Farmworkers
Deportation
WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM
(By
Mahwish Khan, America's Voice)
July 1, 2011
—
The American agriculture industry "fears a disaster" if
Rep. Lamar Smith's E-Verify legislation becomes law. The current situation in
Georgia, which passed a state E-Verify and now has crops rotting on the vine,
gives credence to those fears.
In their desperation to pass E-Verify legislation, a key
element in the GOP-led "attrition through enforcement" plan (which actually
means mass deportation), Smith is offering some "concessions" to agriculture.
But, as Antonia Ginatta from Human Rights Watch explains, those provisions will
only make the situation worse for the undocumented workers who pick the crops
and feed America.
Farmworkers suffer some of the most serious human rights abuses in the US,
including child labor, unpaid wages, sexual violence, and serious health and
safety violations.
Human Rights Watch research has shown undocumented
status contributes significantly to the vulnerability of these workers. Fear of
deportation and of losing their jobs keeps these workers in abusive work
environments and prevents them from reporting these abuses.
Yet the Legal Workforce Act would not only allow farms to keep hiring
undocumented workers without authorization, it would exacerbate the workers’
susceptibility to abuse.
Under this Act, unauthorized workers already in the country would find
themselves utterly dependent upon their employers for their livelihoods, since
those who return to previous employers would never have their legal status
checked through E-Verify.
These workers would be vulnerable to all categories of
abuse, from wage fraud or theft to sexual violence; and they would probably be
even more fearful of exercising their rights because being fired would be
tantamount to losing all opportunity to work in the US.
Were agriculture to obtain these loopholes, the national roll-out of E-Verify
would no longer be a concern to the industry, but rather a boon. Case in point:
earlier this year, when the Judiciary Committee discussed E-Verify in a hearing
on agricultural worker visas, Rep. Dan Lungren, who represents an agricultural
district in California, said national E-Verify would create a “crisis in
agriculture.” Just a few months later, however, Lungren could be found as a
listed co-sponsor on Smith’s Legal Workforce Act.
Lamar Smith’s Legal Workforce Act does one important service to the dialogue
around immigration and work in the United States, though. It lays bare a truth:
American industries such as agriculture have depended on unauthorized workers,
and that any increased immigration enforcement will need some kind of amnesty
program alongside it.
The Obama administration’s immigration blueprint,
released in May, says as much, stating that a national E-Verify system “must be
accompanied by a legalization program that allows unauthorized workers to get
right with the law.”
For all the wrong reasons, the proposed Legal Workforce Act has advanced the
immigration debate.
The choice now facing Congress is either to support the
Act’s dirty amnesty, one that keeps immigrant workers undocumented, at risk and
vulnerable, or champion a true amnesty that provides legal status to immigrant
workers and pulls them out of the shadows.
Respect for the human rights of workers demands the
latter.