Judge Hanen’s Decision on DACA is a Continuance of Attacks on Immigrant Families – Permanent Legislative Protection and Strong Agency Accountability is Imperative

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

July 17, 2021

CONTACT: Mari Perales Sánchez | mariap@cdmigrante.org

Baltimore, MD – Texas Federal Judge Hanen has ruled to stop DACA approvals for new applicants. DACA approvals of current recipients will continue to be processed and approved. As soon as applications processing became available to them last December, new applicants rushed to submit their applications to the Department of Homeland Security, just to face months-long processing backlogs beyond their control. This decision unjustly affects them, their families, and the broader immigrant community. 

We have always known that DACA has been a temporary, band-aid solution. We call on Congress and politicians to fulfill their promises to the immigrant community and provide permanent protections to all eleven million undocumented immigrants and their families. We also urge the White House and Federal Agencies to bolster their services to applicants. 

The lives of immigrant youth and their families cannot be constantly weaponized for political means — we have a moral, socioeconomic, and communal duty to stop this cycle of uncertainty for our immigrant community.

Mari Perales Sanchez, who is leading policy advocacy initiatives at Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, is a current DACA recipient who in 2017 sued the Trump Administration on DACA and went on to the Supreme Court. She said, “This decision is vile and deeply impacts immigrant families as a whole. We have recent high school graduates who couldn’t wait to receive work authorization and families seeking protection from deportation whose lives are once again being thrown into uncertainty. Our lives cannot keep being halted, derailed or changed by court decisions and court decisions again. We need an immediate, permanent answer from Washington now.” 

CDC Expands Partnership with Migrant Workers’ Rights Organization on COVID-19 Campaign

Coordinated Outreach Campaign Aims to Prevent Infectious Diseases among Workers in Protein Processing Industries

BALTIMORE, MD – Centro de los Derechos del Migrante (CDM), a binational migrant rights organization based in the U.S. and Mexico, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have signed a five-year cooperative agreement to prevent and control infectious disease among migrant workers in protein (meat/poultry/seafood) processing industries. In its first year, the demonstration phase of the project aims to reach up to 19,000 workers in the Delmarva region (encompassing areas of Delaware, Maryland and Virginia) with guidance and best practices on disease prevention. The project will also support workers’ understanding of their rights and responsibilities relating to workplace health and safety. The initial effort is funded by a $1.7 million grant and will also provide data to the CDC to inform new guidelines and best practices, including vaccination strategies.

Workers in the U.S. protein industry, many of them migrant workers, have limited access to basic services, including healthcare. In December of 2020, the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) reported that foreign-born workers at meat and poultry processing facilities including in Maryland are especially vulnerable to SARS CoV-2 infection due in part to communications barriers and public health hazards at work and in the community. The study further recommended that partnership with community-based organizations and labor groups “to disseminate culturally and linguistically tailored messages about risk reduction behaviors” could make a difference in workers’ health outcomes.

As part of this grant, CDM is coordinating a regional network of organizations, including el Comité de Apoyo a los Trabajadores Agrícolas (CATA), Legal Aid Justice Center, Rebirth, Inc. and UFCW Local 27. The Migrant Clinicians Network is providing technical assistance to the project.

“Through our 15 years supporting migrant workers, we know that coalition-building should be at the heart of any effective crisis response,” said Rachel Micah-Jones, Founder and Executive Director of CDM. “Collaboration is essential, and we’re partnered with incredible allies with deep relationships with worker communities. This grant will strengthen these partnerships to improve health conditions for workers during the pandemic. The increase in COVID cases and changes in vaccination efforts heighten the importance of this campaign. We look forward to leveraging the CDC and our partners’ expertise in order to provide reliable information to workers across the U.S.”

Migrant workers who have contacted CDM during the pandemic report going to work while showing COVID-19 symptoms for fear of not receiving pay, even if it meant exposing their colleagues to infection. While most workers’ first language is Spanish, an increasing number speak indigenous languages such as Mixtec and Nahuatl, complicating public health outreach.

“Tailoring information to workers’ needs is critical to successfully suppressing outbreaks and coordinating vaccination efforts,” said Julia Coburn, CDM’s Project Director. “Creating multilingual content cross print and digital resources is part of the equation, but it also requires tapping into existing communication channels that can reach workers with the right information at the right time. The trust CDM and our partner organizations have built over the years with migrant worker communities is critical to these efforts.”

Alongside project partners, CDM has leveraged a wide range of tactics in the information campaign, including distributing printed materials and sharing information digitally via Facebook, WhatsApp and Contratados.org — the organization’s migrant worker platform. As part of the grant, Contratados.org will be equipped with an automated chatbot, giving workers 24/7 access to advice, guidance and emergency support free from employer surveillance and intimidation.

“This collaborative agreement enhances CDC’s capacity to better serve and reach a truly multi-lingual and culturally diverse group of essential workers by integrating CDM and their partners into the national pandemic response already underway,” said Kevin Chatham-Stephens, Lead for CDC’s COVID-19 Response Health Systems and Worker Safety Task Force. “The partnership allows CDC to use its existing relationships with organizations and workers, and its linguistic and cultural skills, to better create and disseminate safety information to those who need it, increase the number of workers willing to adopt actions that will keep them healthy and safe, and respond to unique emergency situations affecting this diverse workforce.”

According to Michael Flynn, CDC Technical Lead for the project, “Early results of this partnership include the formation of multi-stakeholder regional network; distribution of PPE and informational materials to hundreds of protein processing workers in DE-MD-VA; multilingual social media and radio-based outreach achieving hundreds of thousands of followers engagements; and the launch of a multilingual #covidchat campaign centering CDC guidance on COVID-19 vaccination.”

Statements of support from partners:

The Migrant Clinicians Network is pleased to be a partner in this important initiative aimed at preventing COVID-19 among a largely immigrant workforce who labor tirelessly to keep food on our tables and who are at the heart of Delmarva’s chicken and crab industries,” said Amy Liebman, who directs the Migrant Clinicians Network’s East Region Office. “For over three decades, MCN has focused on the occupational health disparities of migrant and immigrant workers and their families. We bring to this project our expertise in worker health and safety and assessing the impact to targeted interventions. We look forward to helping this project showcase the immediate and lasting impact that this important initiative will have on the lives of workers and their communities.”

“Workers in the protein processing industry have been deeply impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic and despite a lot of attention nationwide, have seen few improvements in their workplaces to provide meaningful protections to their health and safety. Now, as the vaccine begins to roll out, there is even less focus on the precautions needed,” said Jessica Culley at CATA. “As an organization that strives to give workers the tools they need to stand up for their rights, we are excited to join with other organizations to work to ensure that workers have reliable, accurate information on their rights and the services available to them. We hope that this will help to create real and meaningful protections of their well-being.”

Cecilia Hernández, community organizer at Legal Aid Justice Center: “As an organization that is deeply engaged with essential workers in poultry, seafood and agriculture industries, LAJC understands the risks that these communities face when claiming their rights. We also understand the value of collaborating with organizations that share common concerns and goals to support these workers, particularly in the midst of a pandemic. Now, more than ever, we must stand in unity to ensure that workers can safeguard themselves and their communities around them by accessing the vaccine and other health protections.”

Habacuc Petion, Founder and Executive Director of Rebirth stated: “Rebirth’s mission is to advocate for the rights and facilitate resources for the low income and immigrant workers in our community. Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, our organization has been providing health, safety and workers’ rights training and outreach to many workers and community members. Unfortunately, Haitian workers in particular continue to face challenges to accessing vaccines and accurate information about their options. Employers have not been supportive, and misinformation is rampant at all levels. We welcome the opportunity to join forces on this project as a partner and a collaborator at this critical time.”

Javiel Nazario from UFCW Local 27 said: “To put an end to this pandemic, we must work together. All of us – from our union members on the frontlines, to regulators tasked with ensuring their safety, to our families, friends, and community partners. We all have a role to play to save lives and prevent the spread of infectious diseases, COVID-19, and address workplace issues. Local 27 welcomes this opportunity to be a part of the Protein worker project and looks forward to working with CDM and all the partners to address the safety concerns facing our members.”

About Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM)

Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM) envisions a world where migrant workers’ rights are respected, and laws and policies reflect their voices. Through education, outreach, and leadership development; intake, evaluation, and referral services; litigation support and direct representation; and policy advocacy; CDM empowers migrant workers to defend and protect their rights as they move between their home communities and their workplaces in the United States. www.cdmigrante.org

Migrant Worker Women File First Complaint against the U.S. Government under the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 23, 2021

Contact: Evy Peña (evy@cdmigrante.org)

Migrant Worker Women File First Complaint against the U.S. Government under the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement

MEXICO CITY, MEXICO — Today, migrant worker women and a binational coalition of civil society organizations filed the first complaint against the U.S. government under the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA). Petitioners are accusing the U.S. government of failing to enforce its labor laws against sex-based discrimination for migrant worker women on temporary labor migration visas, violating its obligations under Article 23 of the USMCA. The coalition is led by the binational organization Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM).

Hundreds of thousands of migrant workers travel to the U.S. every year to work on H-2A agricultural visas and H-2B visas in non-agricultural industries, such as construction and seafood processing. According to data from the Department of Homeland Security, about 90% of H-2A workers are from Mexico. Through discriminatory recruitment and hiring practices, women are largely excluded from accessing these visas. For example, in 2018 3% of all H-2A visas were issued to women, while women made up approximately 25% of all farm laborers in the United States. Migrant worker women who are hired on H-2 visas are often channeled into lower-paying jobs under the programs and face gender-based violence.

For 15 years, CDM has documented how the U.S. government has allowed systemic sex-based discrimination. Advertisements for H-2 work on social media and in communities across Mexico reveal open sex-based discrimination in recruitment. The lack of oversight of the hiring process enables U.S. employers to dodge responsibility for H-2 gender discrimination

Submitted to the Labor Policy And Institutional Relations Unit Through The General Directorate Of Institutional Relations In The Secretariat Of Labor And Social Welfare (STPS), this is the first complaint filed against the United States under the new trade agreement and serves as an important test of the USMCA’s rules and enforcement mechanisms. Article 23.3 of the USMCA declares that parties adopt and maintain rights including “the elimination of discrimination in respect of employment and occupation.” Article 23.8 establishes that parties must ensure that migrant workers are protected under its labor laws. In the U.S., Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 forbids discrimination and recruitment in hiring as well as prohibits employers from discriminating against a worker based on sex “with respect to compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges” of employment.

“All eyes are on the governments of Mexico and the US. This is the first complaint filed against the U.S. government under the USMCA, and it’s a clear-cut case: look at statistics, documented cases and discriminatory job ads on social media. Gender-based discrimination isn’t just entrenched in guestworker programs — it goes completely unabated,” said Rachel Micah-Jones, founder and executive director at CDM. “By failing to enforce its anti-discrimination laws, the U.S. is fostering gender inequity. The governments of Mexico and the US need to respond promptly and meaningfully to prove that the labor protections under the USMCA aren’t just words on paper.”

CDM filed two complaints under the NAFTA labor side accord, the North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation (NAALC). These included a 2016 petition alleging inadequate action to combat H-2 gender discrimination that received a characteristically weak response from the Mexican government. When the NAFTA renegotiation began, CDM mobilized allies to enshrine labor protections in the new labor agreement. CDM representatives and worker leaders testified before the U.S. Trade Representative, arguing the need for an integrated labor chapter with real enforcement to replace the feeble NAFTA side accord.

“Discrimination has been present in my life since the first time I tried to get a work visa in 2001,” said Adareli Ponce Hernandez, co-petitioner and member of CDM’s Migrant Defense Committee. “Now, history is repeating itself: women are seeking equality of opportunity under the H-2 visa with negative results. I hope that the United States changes its policies to prevent discrimination against us women — we need equal opportunities.”

The USMCA complaint outlines enforcement measures for the U.S. to adopt in order to ensure access to justice and adequate oversight. Recommendations include:

  • The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s (EEOC) and state agencies charged with implementing anti-discrimination policy should make their complaint processes accessible to H-2 workers by setting up a 24-hour complaint hotline in multiple languages, including indigenous languages and Spanish.
  • The EEOC and DOL should affirmatively allocate more resources to investigating and monitoring H-2 workplaces for sex-based labor segregation.
  • Access to legal services, including federally funded legal services should be extended to all H-2 workers.
  • The DOL, DOS, and United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) should improve record keeping and data transparency to allow for better monitoring of sex distribution in the H-2 programs, including by occupation and wage.

The United States and Mexico should develop cooperative activities which address “gender-related issues in the field of labor and employment, including the elimination of discrimination on the basis of sex in respect of employment, occupation, and wages.

“I’d like to tell the working women who are facing abuse that when I decided and chose to speak up, I was very afraid due to painful experiences,” said Maritza Perez, a co-petitioner and former farmworker on an H-2A visa. “But let’s have faith and courage to raise our voices, looking inside ourselves to find the strength to demand that our rights as migrants be upheld.”

To read the complaint, please visit: https://cdmigrante.org/migrant-worker-women-usmca/

Additional statements of support:

Mily Treviño-Saucedo, Executive Director at Alianza Nacional de Campesinas said: “Life for immigrant farmworkers in the United States is tough. First, too few farmworker women qualify for the program due to gender discrimination. Second, people who do receive the H-2A visa still worry about losing their visas, so they are afraid of confronting abuse at work. The situation is worse for the few rural women who get an H-2A visa because it is likely that she is the breadwinner, so it is very difficult for her to speak up and report sexual harassment (which is very common in the fields), discrimination or wage theft. Not only does she risk losing the job, but also also their immigration status, which is tied to that same employer. If they lose their job, they can also be deported.”

Mónica Ramírez, Founder and President of Justice for Migrant Women: “I’m honored to link arms with our friends at CDM and migrant worker women who are calling for justice. Too often migrant women experience unjust working conditions; they’re discriminated against because they’re women. We’re calling on the U.S. government to ensure that migrant women workers — wherever they come from — receive the full benefit of the law. Employers should be held accountable; they shouldn’t be allowed to exploit these women workers. We will not stand for it.”

“It is critical that we ensure adequate enforcement of our anti-discrimination and anti-harassment laws related to all workers in the U.S.,” said Jessica Ramey Stender, Senior Counsel for Workplace Justice and Public Policy at Equal Rights Advocates. “All workers deserve a safe and equitable working environment where they’re treated with dignity and respect.”

Sara Nelson, International President, Association of Flight Attendants-CWA: “AFA was founded by women who knew the cost of gender-based discrimination in the workplace all too well. For more than 75 years, our union has worked to end all forms of discrimination in our workplaces and our society. Migrant women are among the most vulnerable workers. It’s time for our government to make it clear that exploitation and discrimination will not be tolerated, and we stand with migrant women and their allies to demand that the US government abide by its obligations under the USMCA to enforce strong labor standards in all member nations.”

“The AFL-CIO has long called for reform of our temporary work visa programs, which fail to ensure basic worker rights and protections. We applaud CDM for shining light on the way that these programs have enabled discrimination and gender-based violence, and we urge the U.S. government to take immediate and decisive action in response to the recommendations outlined in this complaint. America’s unions standing proudly in solidarity with migrant worker women, and as we do with all workers in the region. We must no longer allow guestworker programs to serve as a tool to quietly re-segregate sectors of the workforce into jobs and visa categories based on racialized and gendered notions of work. Moreover, we need labor standards enforcement mechanisms in place to ensure that employers are no longer able to violate the rights of migrant workers with impunity. Reforming these programs and ensuring enforceable rights for all workers, regardless of status, is critical to meeting the mandate for a level playing field under the USMCA,” said Cathy Feingold, AFL-CIO International Director.

About Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM)
Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM) envisions a world where migrant workers’ rights are respected, and laws and policies reflect their voices. Through education, outreach, and leadership development; intake, evaluation, and referral services; litigation support and direct representation; and policy advocacy; CDM empowers migrant workers to defend and protect their rights as they move between their home communities and their workplaces in the United States. www.cdmigrante.org

Introduction Of The Farm Workforce Modernization Act Is Monumental

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

March 9, 2021

Contact: Sulma Guzman, sulma@cdmigrante.org

Introduction of the Farm Workforce Modernization Act is Monumental 

BALTIMORE, MD — Last week, U.S. Representatives Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) and Dan Newhouse (R-WA) reintroduced the Farm Workforce Modernization Act, H.R. 1537, a proposal that would provide immigration relief to millions of farmworkers in the U.S. and implement long overdue reforms to the H-2A program. Historically, farmworkers have been paid terribly low wages and afforded minimal worksite protections despite engaging in grueling, dangerous work. With the support of CDM’s Migrant Defense Committee– a group of over a hundred former and current migrant workers — we urge U.S. policymakers to stand with farmworkers and their families and vote in favor of this bill.

Federal administrations have used immigration enforcement to attack immigrant communities while looking to the fundamentally exploitative H-2A program to address labor shortages.  In the last fifteen years, the H-2A program has grown five times its size with over 250,000 agricultural jobs being certified for the program in 2019 from about 48,000 in 2005. Unfortunately, protections for migrant workers who embark on the labor migration journey have not been strengthened as the program has grown in size.  Our 2020 report, Ripe for Reform: Abuses of Agricultural Workers in the H-2A Visa Program, based on the surveys of 100 recent H-2A migrant workers, revealed  that  all the workers interviewed experienced at least one serious legal violation of their legal rights. Approximately, 94% faced “three or more serious legal violations”.  About 10% of the U.S. farmworker community comes from abroad through the H-2A agricultural visa program. 

The Farm Workforce Modernization Act includes significant provisions — recruitment transparency, fair housing and transportation, and important anti-discrimination language — that strengthen protections for workers on H-2A visas.  Most importantly, the bill also creates a pathway to citizenship for a limited amount of H-2A migrant workers who work in the U.S. to work year after year. After a certain period, H-2A migrant workers could have the opportunity to petition for permanent residency for themselves and their families, whom they are forced to live apart for long work seasons.  

We continue to advocate for focused legislative efforts to deliver immigration relief to the 11 million undocumented people in the U.S. and all migrant workers. CDM and the Migrant Defense Committee call on Congress to act and push forward the Farm Workforce Modernization Act as a first step to undo the wrongs that undocumented, H-2A migrant farmworkers and agricultural workers with TPS and DED and their families have long experienced.

For Immediate Release: Bracero 2.0 Is Not A Humane Response To Mx-Usa Labor Migration

For immediate release: March 1, 2021

Contact: Evy Peña, evy@cdmigrante.org 

Bracero 2.0 is not a humane response to MX-USA labor migration 

Today, President Joe Biden and Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador met in a highly publicized meeting to discuss among other things a proposal for a labor migration program between the two countries. A proposal suggested by President Lopez Obrador in a statement over the weekend. In the suggested proposal, Mexican workers would come to work in the United States via a labor migration scheme similar to the World War II-era Bracero Program. The mere suggestion of another Bracero Program is alarming for CDM and its allies in the fight for workers’ rights. 

In looking for solutions, the governments of the US and Mexico must look critically at our history and learn from their mistakes. The Bracero Program was a federally-sanctioned program that allowed U.S. farmers to hire only young Mexican men, pay them cheap wages, and send them back to Mexico when the work season was over. Initiated on August 4, 1942 when the United States signed the Mexican Farm Labor Agreement with Mexico, the Bracero Program allowed these Mexican workers to be exploited, discriminated against, and subjected to living and working conditions that would shock our conscience in this day and age. Racist abuse and segregation was the norm for this workforce. Good enough to work in the United States, but not good enough to enter food establishments nor access basic living necessities. This program was far from an idyllic experience for workers and their families with many workers waiting to see their unpaid wages still to this date

CDM in conjunction with Migration that Works, a coalition of labor, migration, civil rights, and anti-trafficking organizations and academics, proposes a new path forward to labor migration–one founded in treating people humanely and with dignity. MTW envisions a values-based model for labor migration that prioritizes the human rights of workers and their families, elevating labor standards for all workers. We seek to build a future in which workers have control over their labor migration process, access to justice, and a pathway to citizenship. A future in which workers are not exploited nor subjected to abusive work conditions. 

We have a solution to labor migration that is not based on recreating the mistakes from the past. We welcome an opportunity to put it into action. 

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Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM) envisions a world where migrant workers’ rights are respected, and laws and policies reflect their voices. Through education, outreach, and leadership development; intake, evaluation, and referral services; litigation support and direct representation; and policy advocacy; CDM empowers Mexico-based migrant workers to defend and protect their rights as they move between their home communities in Mexico and their workplaces in the United States. www.cdmigrante.org

Centro De Los Derechos Del Migrante Applauds The Inclusion Of Migrant Workers In President Biden’s Bold Immigration Bill

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

February 18, 2021

Contact: Sulma Guzmán, sulma@cdmigrante.org

Centro de los Derechos del Migrante Applauds the Inclusion of Migrant Workers in President Biden’s Bold Immigration Bill

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND — Today, Sen. Robert Menendez (D-NJ) and U.S. Rep. Linda Sanchez (D-CA) introduced President Biden’s proposal — the U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021 — in the House of Representatives. The Act includes a pathway to citizenship for 11 million undocumented immigrants who are members of our communities. It also creates an expedited pathway to citizenship for the farmworker community, TPS holders, DACA recipients, and those under Deferred Enforced Departure (DED). This transformative bill also ensures hundreds of thousands of migrant workers in the H-2 temporary visa programs in the food processing and agricultural industries and their families have expedited access to citizenship and stronger worker protections. 

Centro de los Derechos del Migrante (CDM) celebrates the inclusion of a pathway to citizenship for migrant workers. Advocates and workers have been fighting for decades seeking strong worksite protections and an overhaul of a problematic immigration system that keeps families apart. We are enthusiastic and hope the U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021 is the beginning of many concrete federal and legislative actions towards ensuring migrant workers are treated with dignity and afforded long-overdue labor and employment protections.  

The H-2A and H-2B temporary work visa programs are rife with abuse. Year after year, migrant workers must  leave their families behind for months at a time to work in agriculture, seafood processing and other industries in the U.S. These are essential workers – working at the frontlines during the pandemic. Workers in these temporary work visa programs are tied to a single employer; therefore, they are more likely to remain in abusive conditions for the fear of deportation or retaliation. Through its powerful whistleblower protections and expanded access to humanitarian U and T Visas, the U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021 would shift the power imbalance between employers and H-2 migrant workers. Additionally, this bill would also ensure that the Migrant and Seasonal Worker Protection Act, the most important federal farmworker protective law, also applies to workers in the H-2A agricultural visa program.  

The bill takes a bold step in recognizing the importance of family unity, the immigrant community, and the inherent vital role of migrant and immigrant workers. We stand firm in our commitment to fight alongside migrant worker communities to advance strong worker protections and a pathway to citizenship in a manner that advances racial justice, gender equity and creates access to protection and relief for all.  

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Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM) envisions a world where migrant workers’ rights are respected, and laws and policies reflect their voices. Through education, outreach, and leadership development; intake, evaluation, and referral services; litigation support and direct representation; and policy advocacy; CDM empowers Mexico-based migrant workers to defend and protect their rights as they move between their home communities in Mexico and their workplaces in the United States. www.cdmigrante.org

New Report: Abuses In Maryland’S Crab Picking Industry Continue To Threaten Workers During The Covid-19 Pandemic

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: September 24, 2020

Contact: María Perales (mariap@cdmigrante.org)

Evy Peña (evy@cdmigrante.org)

BALTIMORE, MD– Today, Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM), the American University Washington College of Law Immigrant Justice Clinic, and Georgetown University Law Center’s Federal Legislation Clinic have released, Breaking the Shell: How Maryland’s Migrant Crab Pickers Continue to Be “Picked Apart,” a report examining current conditions faced by migrant worker women as crab pickers on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. The vast majority of these workers are Mexican women on temporary work visas tied to their employer who come to the United States seasonally from April to November every year. A followup to 2010’s Picked Apart: The Hidden Struggles of Migrant Worker Women in the Maryland Crab Industry, this new report reveals how H-2B guesworkers remain in a daily fight for their rights and dignity in an atmosphere still rife with gender-based abuse — even when they have been deemed ‘essential’ workers under the COVID-19 pandemic. 

The majority of workers at Maryland’s crab processing plants arrive in the United States on H-2B guestworker visas. Because their immigration status is contingent on their employment, for guestworkers, raising complaints means risking their jobs, their immigration status and the opportunity to return the following work season. A decade ago, CDM and the American University Washington College of Law Immigrant Justice Clinic released Picked Apart, unveiling systemic abuses in the Maryland Eastern Shore crab industry — with workers subject to discrimination, retaliation, recruitment and wage and hour abuses. In the wake of the report, migrant worker women won important concessions and regulatory changes, such as the prohibition of recruitment fees and requiring employers to pay for the cost of tools and equipment.

“We’ve witnessed the bravery of  crab workers in speaking out, organizing and fighting for their basic rights in spite of fear of employer retaliation,” said Rachel Micah-Jones, Founder and Executive Director at CDM. “Since Picked Apart, the rights of  H-2B workers in the Maryland Eastern Shore have been under constant attack by industry lobbyists and the politicians that put corporate interests over worker safety. Now the pandemic has brought new urgency to reforms and emergency measures to save lives and protect the health of workers.” 

“When we authored and published Picked Apart ten years ago, we understood the complexity of the challenges relating to  migrant workers’ rights at the Eastern Shore, says Jayesh Rathod, Associate Dean for Experiential Education and Director of the Immigrant Justice Clinic at American University Washington College of Law. “Regrettably, abuses within the H-2B program have been documented nationwide, and industry representatives often resist strengthened protections for workers. Although there have been some improvements in the experience of workers, we must continue to ensure that the rights of migrant workers in the Maryland crab industry are fully respected.”

The report remarks that while the pandemic did not create the labor abuses in the H-2B Maryland seafood industry, it has heightened them. Crab pickers have been at work throughout the pandemic where they face precarious conditions such as overcrowded housing, cramped conditions and a lack of accessible medical care. Breaking the Shell suggests that crab houses have been linked to airborne diseases and asthma-aggravating conditions. It also notes that government agencies’ failure to enact emergency safety regulations during the pandemic poses serious concerns about the health and safety of crab pickers. In July, Delmarva Now and the Baltimore Sun reported that approximately 50 workers fell ill with COVID-19 in Maryland crab houses in the Eastern Shore.

“The women who work as crab pickers are caught in an impossible situation,” said Dr. Thurka Sangaramoorthy, a cultural and medical anthropologist and an infectious disease expert at the University of Maryland, College Park. “They need to be able to produce and meet the strict production quotas to be able to stay and work. When they do get sick, they often feel like they need to continue to work to meet those demands. Plus, their working and living conditions put them at serious risk for COVID-19 and they face critical barriers in accessing care and treatment.” 

“COVID-19 has ripped the thin veil that had previously and conveniently shielded people in the United States from the working conditions so many of these essential crab pickers endure each day,” says Amy Liebman, Eastern Shore resident and Director of the Environmental and Occupational Health Programs for the Migrant Clinicians Network. “These women, who are at the heart of Maryland’s treasured crab industry, deserve safe working conditions and access to health care. It is time to act so that these workers are protected.”

Breaking the Shell demonstrates how Maryland’s crab industry remains highly gender segregated and rife with discrimination. Workers report that men earn a higher wage for the crab-cleaning than their women counterparts do as crab pickers. Men are occasionally offered the chance to switch between crab-picking and crab-cleaning jobs and are paid in higher hourly rates. Women are not afforded the same employment mobility, suggesting systemic violations of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act.

According to the report, pregnancy discrimination and family separation are embedded in the H-2B program on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. Nearly 40 % of  the women crab pickers surveyed report being pregnant during their employment; they describe being compelled to hide their pregnancy from recruiters due to fear they wouldn’t be recruited to work in the United States. The majority of pregnant workers are also required to move out of employer-provided housing towards the end of their pregnancy terms. Additionally, while 88% of workers reported having children, the majority reported leaving their children and families behind for eight months at a time, citing the difficulties in obtaining H-4 visas for family members, and the lack of housing options as reasons.

“Family separation has practically become a condition of employment,” said Cori Alonso-Yoder, Visiting Director of Georgetown Law’s Federal Legislation Clinic and CDM Board Member. “The indignity of separation on workers and the potential harms to their children necessitate reforms to the H-2B program. No one should have to choose between providing for their family and being with their children.” 

The report provides substantial recommendations to  agencies and policymakers at the state, federal, and international levels to urgently reform and address these systemic wrongs. These include an enforceable emergency standard for the pandemic at the state level  from Maryland’s Governor and Office of Safety and Health (MOSH) as well as from The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) at the federal level to ensure the safety of workers in the short-term.

Sulma Guzman, Policy Director and Legislative Counsel at CDM, states, “The pandemic and this report highlight the importance of our continued work and the need for enforceable protections. Migrant worker women should not have to risk their lives when going to work.  Now more than ever, we need our federal and state executives to issue worker protections.”

Beyond the pandemic, Breaking the Shell tasks state and national legislators with passing stronger legislation that regulates recruitment processes and sanction employers who utilize recruiters that charge excessive or improper fees to workers. 

Senator Susan Lee, Maryland State legislator and co-sponsor of  SB 742 – The Fair Recruitment and Transparency Act says, “Breaking the Shell is instrumental in informing me and other policymakers about migrant workers in the Eastern Shore who we otherwise might never effectively communicate with about their recruitment horrors.  The report shines a much-needed light on people with inherent human dignity, but who are not easily seen or heard, and whose labor serves as the glue holding together the business behind Maryland’s signature cultural staple.”  

Breaking the Shell: How Maryland’s Migrant Crab Pickers Continue to Be “Picked Apart” can be access online at: https://cdmigrante.org/breaking-the-shell/

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About Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM)

Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM) envisions a world where migrant workers’ rights are respected, and laws and policies reflect their voices. Through education, outreach, and leadership development; intake, evaluation, and referral services; litigation support and direct representation; and policy advocacy; CDM empowers Mexico-based migrant workers to defend and protect their rights as they move between their home communities in Mexico and their workplaces in the United States. www.cdmigrante.org

About American University Washington College of Law, Immigrant Justice Clinic

The Washington College of Law’s Immigrant Justice Clinic provides representation on a broad range of cases and projects involving individual immigrants and migrants. The Immigrant Justice Clinic serves migrants and their communities in the D.C. metropolitan area, the greater United States, and beyond. Student attorneys handle matters that develop core lawyering skills, such as interviewing, counseling, negotiation, and trial advocacy, while cultivating complementary skills in the areas of policy and legislative advocacy, community organizing, and working with the media.

About Georgetown University Law Center, Federal Legislation Clinic

The Federal Legislation Clinic at Georgetown University Law Center instructs law students in the practical aspects of legislative lawyering. For over twenty-five years, the Federal Legislation Clinic has offered experiential opportunities for students to learn the unique skills associated with being a lawyer who practices at the intersection of law, advocacy, and politics. While focusing on federal legislation, the Federal Legislation Clinic also works in areas of state and local legislation that implicate federal law.

Workers on H-2B Visas Sue Atlanta-Based Contractor for Retaliation, Discrimination, and Wage Violations

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: June 30, 2020
Contact: María Perales (mariap@cdmigrante.org)
Evy Peña (evy@cdmigrante.org)

Atlanta, Georgia — Five Mexican workers recruited to work on temporary H-2B visas have filed a lawsuit against Atlanta-based construction company Precision 2000, its side-company Casa Properties, and the owners of these companies (“Defendants”). Juan Servando Garcia Robelo and four other workers are seeking unpaid wages and damages due to unlawfully mandated housing fees, retaliation, breach of contract, and discrimination. Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM) and Buckley Beal, LLP are representing the workers in the case in the United States District Court, Northern District of Georgia.

Precision 2000, an Atlanta-based construction company which commonly contracts with government agencies, such as the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), recruited workers in Mexico to temporarily relocate to Georgia and work construction jobs under the H-2B guestworker program. Precision 2000 promised to pay workers wages that complied with federal and state law, and contracted with them to provide affordable housing from April through December 2019. These promises were false.

Upon the workers’ arrival, the Defendants charged Garcia Robelo, and the other plaintiffs exorbitant fees in exchange for overcrowded, often sweltering substandard housing. The workers, who are all from Mexico, also allege that Precision 2000 engaged in discrimination by forcing them to live in substandard housing and telling them they could go back to Mexico if they did not want to live in the housing.

Regarding the housing conditions, one of the workers explained, “I shared a room with three other people—it was so crowded that not two people could walk and exit the room at the same time. In total, there were about thirteen of us in the house, and we each paid $450 a month. I feel as though they were trying to use us and the rental charges they charged of us to fund their actual construction projects.”

The H-2B program allows U.S. employers to recruit workers to perform temporary nonagricultual labor, including construction, landscaping and seafood processing. Workers on H-2B visas are mostly from Mexico.

The workers raised complaints about the excessive rental charges and asked to seek alternative housing. Precision 2000, its side-company, Casa Properties and the individual Defendants refused— indicating that living in their housing was a condition of employment. When the Plaintiffs the workers persisted in complaining, the defendants retaliated by firing them before their contracts were over, and forcing the workers return to Mexico.

“We were fired in such unjust way. We need to be treated with dignity — for necessity, we sometimes put up with horrible situations. I lived in such sweltering housing. I complained about the situation several times, but they did not care about us — all they cared about was that we did work. I hope there is justice,” described Juan Servando Garcia Robelo, a worker in the case.

The government has consistently compromised migrant workers’ labor and human rights by granting employers additional visas or privileges without expanding protections for workers. On June 22, the Trump Administration announced a block on the entry of workers on H-2B visas with an exemption for workers who provide services essential to the food supply chain. In May, the Department of Homeland Security published a rule to ease requirements for H-2B employers to hire workers in food processing industries.

“Workers on H-2B visas often live in substandard employer housing, face threats of deportation, and lack the freedom to move. When they speak out, they often face retaliation with little support to fight back — H-2B workers generally cannot access federally funded legal services. The pandemic highlights how these conditions can be lethal for the thousands of migrant workers who work under temporary employment-based visas,” stated Ben Botts, Legal Director at Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc.

Rachel Berlin Benjamin, Partner at Buckley Beal commented: “This case is about holding Precision 2000 and its related company and owners responsible for the discriminatory and retaliatory treatment of our clients and possibly countless others on account of their race and national origin. There is no room for racism in the workplace. Migrants play a critical role in our nation’s economy and culture. We must ensure that they are protected from unlawful treatment in the workplace.”

In April, CDM published a letter, signed by over thirty organizations, directed at several U.S. agencies, including the Department of Labor and the Department of Health and Services, to enact protections for H-2B workers who are at risk of acquiring and transmitting COVID-19. The recommendations included guidance for safe housing. The letter can be found here: https://cdmigrante.org/letter-to-federal-agencies-covid-19/

About Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM)
Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM) envisions a world where migrant workers’ rights are respected, and laws and policies reflect their voices. Through education, outreach, and leadership development; intake, evaluation, and referral services; litigation support and direct representation; and policy advocacy; CDM empowers migrant workers to defend and protect their rights as they move between their home communities and their workplaces in the United States. www.cdmigrante.org

About Buckley Beal, LLP
Buckley Beal is one of Atlanta’s leading employment litigation firms. With an outstanding reputation for winning cases at trial and on appeal, the firm specializes in handling cases on behalf of employees involving workplace discrimination, retaliation, and harassment, unpaid overtime, and other civil rights matters. For more information about Buckley Beal, visit www.buckleybeal.com.

Migrant Workers on H-2A Visas File Trafficking Lawsuit against Prominent Michigan Nursery

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: June 25, 2020
Contact: Marí Perales Sánchez (mariap@cdmigrante.org)

Four Star Greenhouse sought to evade responsibility for thousands in wages owed to its workers, benefited from labor trafficking, and allowed workers who complained to be deported by Immigration Authorities.

YPSILANTI, MI – Today, six workers from Mexico, who traveled to the U.S. on H-2A visas in 2017 and 2018, filed a lawsuit against Four Star Greenhouse, Inc. (Four Star), source of nationwide Proven Winners® plants, for unpaid wages, knowingly benefiting from labor trafficking and retaliation. Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM), a transnational workers’ rights organization, and the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center (MIRC) and Farmworker Legal Services of Michigan (FLS) are representing the workers in the lawsuit filed in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan.

Through a third-party agent, Four Star hired Gerardo Santiago Hernandez, Eduardo Reyes Trujillo, and four other workers from Mexico to work at its sprawling nursery in Michigan’s Monroe County. Four Star had complete authority over the workers during the workday, including scheduling, directly supervising their work, and timekeeping, and the workers performed jobs integral to Four Star’s business. Under the false promise that their visa had been extended, Four Star, acting through its recruiting agent, mandated workers to continue working, despite a total lack of pay, and in the face of threats of blacklisting if they refused. The workers were forced to work for weeks without compensation.

The plaintiffs raised multiple complaints about nonpayment but were instead retaliated against. Four Star’s agent lured Plaintiffs and several other workers from their migrant camp by the claim that a housing inspection would be taking place and to vacate the premises. Instead, Four Star’s agent took the workers to immigration officials who were waiting for them in a Walmart parking lot. After over a month in a Michigan immigration detention facility, the plaintiffs ultimately paid hundreds of dollars to return to Mexico.

For years, CDM has documented thousands of cases of abuse for guestworkers. The limited oversight and transparency and the lack of labor mobility embedded in the structure of guestworker programs facilitate exploitation and labor trafficking. CDM’s report Ripe for Reform: Abuses of Agricultural Workers in the H-2A program, based on 100 interviews with H-2A workers nationwide, found that all workers interviewed faced at least one serious legal violation of the program’s rules and regulations. About a third of workers interviewed did not feel free to quit, citing fears of retaliation, blacklisting, and deportation, and 34% experienced restrictions on their mobility respectively, both indicators of human trafficking.

Nationwide, the H-2A program has more than tripled in size in the last decade, with the federal government certifying more than a quarter million positions for H-2A workers. In 2018, Michigan alone had 8,359 H-2A certified positions in the state. H-2A migrant workers harvest potatoes, apples, and broccoli among other crops in addition to working in greenhouses like Four Star’s. With only a few hundred available positions in 2012 to almost ten thousand H-2A positions in 2018, the program expanded by more than 26 times in just six years.

“It’s unjust for us to travel so far – to be separated from our families and at points, not even know how they are doing- and then for our employers to fail to fulfill their promises to us, not pay us, and retaliate against us. It is not fair,” shared Eduardo Reyes Trujillo, one of the workers filing the suit.

“We received so many false promises. It shouldn’t be possible for us to work so hard and not get paid as one should – for me that is corruption. I am grateful that today we are fighting for our rights,” shared Gerardo Santiago Hernandez.

“These brave workers’ case demonstrates how the H-2A program in fact facilitates unlawful employer practices like human trafficking and retaliation. Unfortunately, it also shows how often federal immigration authorities support low-road employers’ illicit conduct rather than standing up for vulnerable migrant workers,” said Centro de los Derechos del Migrante Legal Director, Ben Botts.

Supervising Attorney, Olivia Villegas of Farmworker Legal Services stated, “Farmworker Legal Services stands together with the courageous workers who are asserting their rights and demanding justice. This case is one example of how unscrupulous employers utilize the H-2A program to exploit workers. Workers should never be compelled to work out of fear of retaliation.”
“These workers traveled thousands of miles, and gave hundreds of hours of their labor under false promises that they would be paid, lies about their visas and threats to their future job opportunities. Despite facing retaliation, they have continued to bravely come forward, for themselves, and so many other workers who deserve justice,” stated Anna Hill, Lead Attorney at Michigan Immigrant Rights Center.

About Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM)
Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM) envisions a world where migrant workers’ rights are respected, and laws and policies reflect their voices. Through education, outreach, and leadership development; intake, evaluation, and referral services; litigation support and direct representation; and policy advocacy; CDM empowers Mexico-based migrant workers to defend and protect their rights as they move between their home communities in Mexico and their workplaces in the United States. www.cdmigrante.org

About Farmworker Legal Services of Michigan
FLS fights for justice and dignity alongside the farmworker community. For over 20 years, FLS has conducted outreach at migrant labor camps throughout the state of Michigan; offered technical assistance, referrals, advice, and intake services to farmworkers through the statewide Farmworker and Immigrant Worker Hotline; and represented farmworkers in cases involving immigration, unlawful recruitment fees, wage theft, substandard housing or working conditions, retaliation, discrimination, and other exploitative schemes. FLS is committed to ensuring immigrant, migrant, and seasonal farmworkers’ equal access to economic and social justice through civil impact litigation in employment and civil rights cases. farmworkerlaw.org.

About Michigan Immigrant Rights Center (MIRC)
MIRC is a statewide legal resource center for Michigan’s immigrant communities that works to build a thriving Michigan where immigrant communities experience equity and belonging. MIRC’s work is rooted in three pillars: direct legal services, systemic advocacy, and community engagement and education. MIRC’s Farmworker and Immigrant Worker Rights practice focuses on representing farmworkers with their employment and civil rights matters and specializes in cases at the intersection of workplace and immigrant rights. michiganimmigrant.org

Two Au Pairs Sue Sponsor Agency and Maryland Couple for Wage Theft, Forced Labor and Trafficking

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: June 22, 2020
Contact: Evy Peña (evy@cdmigrante.org)

Baltimore, Maryland — Today, former au pair workers Sandra Peters (née Guzman-Reyes) and Tatiana Cuenca filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court, seeking compensatory and punitive damages for breach of contract, unpaid wages, forced labor, and trafficking. Peters and Cuenca allege working hour violations, unpaid wages, routine verbal abuse, and threats. The sponsor agency AuPairCare Inc. and host parents Michaele C. Samuel and Adam Ishaeik are named as defendants. Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM), a transnational migrants rights organization, and Kahn, Smith & Collins, P.A. are representing the plaintiffs.

Peters and Cuenca were recruited in Mexico and Colombia, respectively, to work as au pairs on J-1 visas. They arrived to work in Clinton, Maryland indebted after paying thousands of dollars in program fees. While Peters and Cuenca worked for the Samuel family separately, in 2016 and 2018, they described similar working conditions. In addition to forcing the plaintiffs to work beyond contracted hours and responsibilities, the host parents limited their access to food, restricted their movements, threatened them with deportation, and constantly monitored them through a network of surveillance cameras. Defendant Michaele C. Samuel offers her book, “Being a Great Au Pair: A Practical Guide,” for $7.95 on Amazon.

“I am proud to be suing the family alongside Tatiana — we are seeking justice not only for us but for all the other au pairs who lived with this and other families and have suffered like we did,” stated Sandra Peters. “I believe that if au pairs hear about our case, they will arm themselves with courage and take action. Host families will know that they can’t get away with abusing us.”

Established by the Department of State as a “cultural exchange”, the program allows young people — mostly women — from around the world to work in the United States providing childcare services. On paper, the J-1 program limits au pair’s work to childcare, but abuses have been rampant in the program since its inception in 1986.

“Our case is a clear example of how the au pair program puts young women at risk for rights violations. My sponsor agency and the State Department failed to support me when I was being abused and threatened,” said Tatiana Cuenca. “The program should be restructured in a way that provides access to justice for workers like us. We deserve to be treated with dignity and respect.”

Due to the influential au pair lobby, legislators and the State Department have been reluctant to increase protections and enforcement. According to news reports, the State Department is planning to further scale back protections, requiring employers only pay au pairs the federal minimum wage. The rule is at odds with a December ruling in the First Circuit that stated au pairs in Massachusetts must be paid the higher state wage.

“The au pair program is a labor migration program. Au pairs, who are providing essential caregiving services to families across the country, are paying to work,” said Sulma Guzman, policy director at CDM. “Their immigration status is tied to their employment. If they speak out to defend their rights, they fear being banned from the program. With au pairs paying substantial fees to work under the program, they often have no choice but to remain in abusive conditions, rather than return home to debt.”

“This case further illustrates that not all au pairs are treated with the dignity and respect they deserve,” said Christopher Ryon, one of the attorneys for the Plaintiffs. “Au pairs remain vulnerable to abuse and wage theft.”

In 2018, Migration That Works, a coalition chaired by CDM, released “Shortchanged: The Big Business Behind the Low Wage J-1 Au Pair Program,” detailing how the “cultural exchange” program has morphed into an exploitative system of low wage domestic labor. The full report can be found at: https://migrationthatworks.org/reports/shortchanged/

About Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM)

Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM) envisions a world where migrant workers’ rights are respected, and laws and policies reflect their voices. Through education, outreach, and leadership development; intake, evaluation, and referral services; litigation support and direct representation; and policy advocacy; CDM empowers Mexico-based migrant workers to defend and protect their rights as they move between their home communities in Mexico and their workplaces in the United States. www.cdmigrante.org

About Kahn, Smith & Collins, P.A

The attorneys at Kahn, Smith & Collins, P.A. advocate for fairness at work. This Baltimore based Firm represents workers and labor unions in private and public employment and is dedicated to improving the conditions of workers.