For Immediate Release: New Report Uncovers Widespread Abuse Of Agricultural Workers In H-2A Visa Program

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: April 8, 2020
Contact: María Perales (mariap@cdmigrante.org)
Evy Peña (evy@cdmigrante.org)

New Report Uncovers Widespread Abuse of Agricultural Workers in H-2A Visa Program

100% of Workers Surveyed  Report at Least One Serious Rights’ Violation

BALTIMORE, MD– A new report released today by Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM) —  a transnational migrant workers’ rights organization — documents extensive labor abuses in the U.S. H-2A visa program.  The program has expanded with a record 256,667 workers certified in FY 2019. Without reform, the number of workers suffering abuse will only get larger and already-anemic government oversight will prove even less effective, according to the report 

Ripe for Reform: Abuse of Agricultural Workers in the H-2A Visa Program, is based on in-depth interviews with 100 workers across Mexico who came to the U.S. on these visas in the last four years. It documents discrimination, sexual harassment, wage theft, and health and safety violations by their employers — and a startling lack of recourse for workers. It also analyzes how in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, the program’s systemic flaws exacerbate workers’ vulnerability to the virus. 

According to the report, the abuse of workers in the program is not the product of a few “bad apple” employers; rather, it is the foreseeable product of a program that makes workers vulnerable to abuse and offers workers virtually no bargaining power.

Ripe for Reform  recommends both incremental steps, including legislative and regulatory changes, to improve the program as well as a fundamentally re-imagined model that would prioritize the human rights of H-2A workers and their families and elevate labor standards for all workers. 

Descended from early 20th century U.S. agricultural labor practices, the H-2A program’s shortcomings combine the historical exclusion of farmworkers from federal labor protections (rooted in racist Jim Crow policies) with lax federal oversight and worker coercion. Unlike the H-2B program for non-agricultural work, the H-2A program has no limit on the number of visas the government can issue. The rapid expansion has also led to increased recruitment of workers from indigenous communities in Mexico — a group that’s more vulnerable to abuse due to language barriers, geographic location, poverty, and other factors. 

All surveyed workers experienced at least one serious legal violation and 94% experienced three or more. The economically coercive practices inherent in the system make it difficult for workers to protect themselves. 

The expenses and debt accrued by workers to reach jobs often leave them with no choice but to endure abusive and dangerous conditions rather than quit and return home. Sixty two percent of workers interviewed took out loans to get the funds needed to secure the job. Additionally, 26% of workers had to pay fees to recruiters as high as $4,500 — an illegal practice that persists due to poor enforcement. These costs are even more burdensome when workers are paid less than what they were promised upon recruitment, a situation reported by 43% of surveyed workers. 

“Governments’ indifference has let fraud and malfeasance fester in these programs, trapping indebted workers in dangerous jobs with little recourse,” said Rachel Micah-Jones, founder and executive director of CDM. “In fact, the Department of Labor has proposed changes that would make the situation worse.” 

“The idea that the industry will police itself is a fantasy that’s caused terrible hardships. Even when laws are on the books, they’re routinely flouted by bad actors. New legislation is required and enforcement drastically enhanced. Nobody should have to pay to work and be coerced into tolerating abuse.” 

Many workers surveyed experienced indicators of labor trafficking: 34% reported that employers restricted their movement, and 32% described themselves as feeling they were not free to quit. One worker, “Mario,” paid more than $2,000, including $560 in recruitment fees, to secure his job picking crops in Wauchula, Florida, in Spring 2019. Said Mario, “I lived in a chicken pen made out of thin metal material that was in bad shape, and it had bunk beds with 30-40 other people.” Like Mario, 45% of respondents reported overcrowded and/or unsanitary housing conditions. Mario’s weekly wages were between $300 and $400 for over 80 hours of work. He worked every day and received no lunch or rest breaks. Mario and his fellow workers received their wages in cash but were handed payment stubs with significantly higher, inaccurate wages. 

“Once, a colleague took pictures of the payroll, and the employers threatened to return him to Mexico,” said Mario. Several of his coworkers sought to flee, and the supervisor retaliated by taking their passports. It took a tragedy for workers to be able to leave. Said Mario, “There was an accident because a man died at work […] They said that when he died, he had not had access to water.”

The report recommends that Congress take further steps to ban recruitment fees and hold employers strictly liable for any fees that are charged. Further, Congress should explicitly prohibit discrimination in worker recruitment and ensure workers who suffer abuse can access legal services while in the U.S. and abroad. 

Additionally, CDM recommends that the Department of Labor and other federal agencies allocate more resources to monitoring and inspection programs and enforcement mechanisms. The agency should work with the Department of Justice and Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to ensure access to justice for workers facing discrimination in recruitment or employment. The DOL should withdraw its proposed changes to the H-2A regulations which would further undermine workers’ rights in the program.

The report also envisions a re-creation of the temporary agricultural worker program that does at least the following: 

  • Allows workers control over the place they are employed;
  • Gives workers the right to change employers;
  • Offers workers a pathway to citizenship;
  • Offers workers the right to bring immediate family members with them to the U.S., and those family members should be given the right to work;
  • Prohibits discrimination in hiring;
  • Allows workers to join unions or other worker organizations; and
  • Provides workers the right to health care and Social Security benefits.

The full report can be found here.

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

For Immediate Release: Government Accountability Office Issues Report “H-2A And H-2B Visa Programs: Increased Protections Needed For Foreign Workers,” Cdm Urges Immediate Reform

PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

PRESS CONTACT:

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

1-855-234-9699

alissa@cdmigrante.org

Government Accountability Office Issues Report “H-2A and H-2B Visa Programs: Increased Protections Needed for Foreign Workers,” CDM Urges Immediate Reform

On March 6, 2015, the U.S. Government Accountability Office released its report “H-2A and H-2B Visa Programs: Increased Protections Needed for Foreign Workers.” The report responds to a 2013 Congressional mandate to review the recruitment of foreign workers for jobs in the United States.

Drawing on interviews and data from agency officials, employers, H-2 workers and NGOs, including CDM, the report highlights common abuses in the international labor recruitment process. GAO describes anecdotes from employers and federal agencies regarding recruiters who, in exchange for connecting workers with a job, take a portion of workers’ paychecks or charge them high fees. GAO also cites workers who paid $1,250 USD fees to their recruiters, which they paid by taking out loans with 10-15% interest rates. These fees and debts, combined with recruiters’ false promises about working conditions and a lack of accurate and accessible information about H-2 jobs, can lead to a range of abuses including debt bondage, according to GAO. To alleviate these problems, GAO recommends that the agencies make H-2 job information publicly available as soon as possible.

The report also points to the lack of federal protections for H-2B workers, who are not required to receive job contracts and are generally obligated to pay for their own transportation and housing in the United States. Most H-2B workers cannot access federally funded legal services, and their employers are rarely investigated. “The GAO report is an important step to address the problems in the H-2 visa programs,” stated Rachel Micah-Jones, Executive Director of CDM. “From CDM’s 9 years of experience on the ground with migrant workers, the report’s findings regarding the H-2B program are just the tip of the iceberg, and do not fully describe the serious economic coercion and abuses faced by migrants who are on visas that tie them to a single employer. The recommendations made by the GAO, while good, do not go far enough to protect migrant workers’ rights.”

CDM urges the Department of Labor (DOL) and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to jointly issue H-2B regulations modeled after a 2012 DOL rule, which offered H-2B workers improved worker protections while balancing industry interests. The 2012 rule was suspended in 2014 by a Florida district court. Last week the same court suspended the program’s remaining regulations—which offered fewer worker protections—and left employers claiming that DOL’s enforcement power is curtailed. As a result of these two cases the H-2B program is currently suspended, and will remain so until the agencies issue joint regulations.

“GAO is highlighting missing regulatory protections precisely at the moment that government agencies must act together to provide regulations with improved worker protections in the H-2B program. The GAO report makes plain the need for DOL and DHS to issue the 2012 DOL rule, which would provide workers with a modicum of protection,” said Micah-Jones.

CDM also urges DOL, DHS, and the State Department to work together to implement GAO recommendations and to address additional problems described by the report.

For Immediate Release: Florida Court Enjoins H-2B Visa Program Regulations

PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

PRESS CONTACT:

Rachel Micah-Jones

(410) 783-0236

rachel@cdmigrante.org

Florida Court Enjoins H-2B Visa Program Regulations; CDM Calls for the Department of Homeland Security and Department of Labor to Jointly Promulgate Rule with Strong Worker Protections

On March 4, 2015, the United States District Court in the Northern District of Florida issued a decision in Perez v. Perez enjoining the 2009 Department of Labor (DOL) regulations governing the H-2B temporary work visa program. CDM is not counsel in the Perez v. Perez case. The same court enjoined DOL’s 2012 H-2B regulations, which contained important protections for U.S. and temporary foreign workers, in its 2014 decision regarding Bayou Lawn v. Solis. As a result of these decisions the H-2B visa program is currently suspended. In order for the H-2B program to remain in operation, these agencies must issue comprehensive joint regulations immediately. “It is imperative that DHS and DOL issue new regulations modeled after DOL’s 2012 rule,” said Rachel-Micah-Jones, CDM’s Executive Director. “The 2012 rule includes crucial protections against fraud, illegal labor recruitment fees, trafficking and other abuses in the international labor recruitment and employment process.”

For over nine years CDM has worked to uphold and strengthen the rights of H-2B temporary workers from its offices in the U.S. and Mexico. We have worked with hundreds of H-2B landscapers, seafood processers, carnival workers, and others who are frequently vulnerable to recruitment fraud and exploitation due to a lack of strong regulations. The 2012 H-2B rule provides crucial protections to combat these problems. In order to reduce the fees and debt that often make migrant workers vulnerable to abuses on the job, for example, the rule provides for reimbursement of visa and travel costs and fees. It would address recruitment fraud by requiring employers to provide workers with job contracts before they enter the U.S., and to provide DOL with copies of agreements with the recruiters they engage, which would prohibit recruitment fees. The rule would provide protections for workers filing complaints; workers have often been subject to retaliation and blacklisting. Finally, the rule would prevent over-recruitment of workers by requiring employers to pay at least three-quarters of the total hours promised in their work contracts. These provisions must form the basis of new rules implemented by DHS and DOL in this critical moment.

CDM has urged DOL and DHS to act together and issue protections modeled after the 2012 H-2B rule. This week’s decision makes it urgent that the agencies act now, and when they do, they must ensure that any new H-2B regulations have worker protections at their core.

For Immediate Release: Centro De Los Derechos Del Migrante, Inc. Statement On President Obama’s Immigration Announcement

PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

PRESS CONTACT:

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

410-783-0236; 972-854-2540

skarp@cdmigrante.org

BALTIMORE, MD– Last night President Obama took important steps to keep immigrant families together and to uphold migrant workers’ rights. Following over a decade of advocacy by immigrant communities, workers’ rights organizations, and allies, up to five million undocumented immigrants will now be temporarily safe from deportation.  People who have lived in the United States for five years and who are parents of United States citizens or lawful permanent residents will be eligible for relief.  The President will also expand relief for immigrants who are victims of crimes and trafficking, and will create an interagency group to address protections for workers who stand up for their rights. Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM) applauds these reforms, yet urges policymakers to protect the rights of all workers in the United States and to create a path to citizenship for all aspiring Americans.

For over nine years CDM has worked closely with Mexican migrant communities to defend the rights of those who work in the United States both as undocumented workers and as seasonal low-wage workers. These workers, undocumented and with temporary work visas alike, are frequently left vulnerable to abuses by employers and labor recruiters due to their status. When workers are reluctant to report fraud, wage theft, unsafe conditions, discrimination and other abuses due to fear of deportation, wages and labor conditions for all workers decline. The President’s immigration action will allow workers to come out of the shadows and stand up for their rights without fear.

As a part of the immigration action, the President included several targeted initiatives for workers.  The President created the Interagency Working Group for the Consistent Enforcement of Federal Labor, Employment and Immigration Laws.  This Working Group will strengthen processes for staying the removal of, and providing temporary work authorization for, undocumented workers reporting workplace abuses.  The group will tackle a myriad of labor and employment issues facing workers who are vulnerable because of their immigration status.  The Department of Labor’s (DOL) authority to certify U visas has also been expanded to include crimes of extortion, fraud in foreign labor contracting and forced labor when they are uncovered during Wage and Hour investigations.  DOL will also certify T visas for victims of human trafficking.

“Our broken immigration and labor recruitment system puts workers at risk of abuse on the job,” said Rachel Micah-Jones, CDM’s Executive Director. “The President’s executive action includes admirable and much-needed steps towards reform, including temporary initiatives to protect many undocumented workers from deportation and to provide them with work permits. We applaud the President for expanding U and T visas to provide extra protection for immigrant workers who are victims of crime, including labor abuses and human trafficking.  We look forward to learning more about the interagency working group that will strengthen workers’ ability to defend their rights without fear of retaliation.

More work is needed, and we will continue to push for reforms for low-wage migrant workers,” said Micah-Jones. “We will continue to advocate for expanded immigration relief, for justice for workers in the international labor recruitment process and for improved wages and working conditions for low-wage migrant workers.”

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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. 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 through education, outreach, and leadership development; intake, evaluation, and referral services; litigation support and direct representation; and policy advocacy. Find out more at www.cdmigrante.org.

For Immediate Release: Cdm And Radio Bilingüe Launch Collaborative Radio Project

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

July 17, 2014

Press Contacts:

Alissa Escarce, Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM)
410-783-0236alissa@cdmigrante.org

María de Jesús Gómez, Radio Bilingüe
559-455-5782chuyag@radiobilingue.org

Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. and Radio Bilingüe Launch Collaboration on New Radio Series, “Voy Contratado: Migrant Rights on Radio”

Radio Bilingüe, the Latino public radio network, and Centro de los Derechos del Migrante (CDM), the transnational workers’ rights organization, have launched their first partnership. In close collaboration with CDM, Radio Bilingüe will produce “Voy Contratado: Migrant Rights on Radio,” which will explore the experiences and promote the rights of transnational migrant workers through Spanish-language news reports, talk shows, and educational announcements.

Every year, over 100,000 international guest workers travel to the United States to fill temporary jobs through the H-2 visa program. The vast majority of these men and women are recruited from Mexico. They perform grueling jobs in agriculture, construction, seafood processing, and other low-wage industries. With few resources for upholding their rights, transnational workers frequently experience recruitment fraud, wage theft, and unsafe working conditions. Many rely on radio as their main source of information.

With “Voy Contratado,” CDM and Radio Bilingüe will join forces to fill gaps in the information available to transnational migrants over radio. With over 30 years of experience creating radio programming that has informed, engaged, and improved the lives of low-wage migrant workers, Radio Bilingüe already facilitates essential conversations about workers’ rights across borders. CDM has worked for years to improve conditions within H-2 visa programs, organizing and providing legal support to men and women who have experienced abuse while working as landscapers, crab pickers, carnival workers, and more. The organizations will bring together their areas of expertise to create innovative programming that will allow Spanish-, Mixtec-, and Triqui-speaking workers to engage directly with government officials, policymakers, and one another. “This series will help empower workers to make informed decisions and participate in the political processes that impact their lives,” says Rachel Micah-Jones, Executive Director of CDM.

July programs in the “Voy Contratado” series include on-air conversations between low-wage workers and U.S. Department of Labor representatives; discussions of human trafficking within the United States’ crab industry; opportunities for former H-2B landscapers to collect unpaid wages; and more. Programming is available at the links below and on Radio Bilingüe’s stations and affiliates. 

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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. 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 through education, outreach, and leadership development; intake, evaluation, and referral services; litigation support and direct representation; and policy advocacy. Read more about CDM at www.cdmigrante.org.Radio Bilingüe is the leading Latino public radio network and content producer for the nation’s public broadcasting system. Headquartered in Fresno and Oakland, California, Radio Bilingüe owns and operates 13 of its own full-power FM non-commercial stations in California and the Southwest and produces the first – and only – daily national Spanish-language news and public affairs programs in public broadcasting. About 100 affiliate stations throughout the U.S. and Mexico carry the award-winning journalism of Radio Bilingüe’s Noticiero Latino news show and Línea Abierta call-in talk show.

Funding for the “Voy Contratado” series is provided in part by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.

English-language links to “Voy Contratado:” http://radiobilingue.org/en/

Spanish-language links to “Voy Contratado”: http://radiobilingue.org/

For Immediate Release: 2Nd Edition Of Money Manual Helps Mexico-Based Workers Receive Due Compensation

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

May 7, 2014

Press contact(s):

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

410-783-0236; skarp@cdmigrante.org

Nan Schivone, Global Workers Justice Alliance

646-351-1160; nan@globalworkers.org

2nd Edition of Money Manual Helps Mexico-Based Workers

Receive Due Compensation

BALTIMORE, MD— Today, American University Washington College of Law, Centro de los Derechos del Migrante (CDM), and Global Workers Justice Alliance release the second edition of Money Transfers to Mexico, a manual designed to help migrant worker advocates navigate the transfer of funds to their clients in Mexico.

When workers from Mexico win settlement funds in U.S. lawsuits challenging wage theft, discrimination, or human trafficking, advocates face the difficulty of ensuring that their clients receive the money once they have returned to Mexico. Differences in banking in the U.S. and Mexico, increased global security concerns, and professional ethics considerations create significant hurdles in getting workers the funds they are owed

The transfer methods included in Money Transfers to Mexico have facilitated the transfer of millions of dollars in funds awarded to workers by courts, administrative agencies and pursuant to settlement agreements. One woman, whose husband was killed on the job in 2010, filed suit, and through an innovative funds transfer mechanism, she received the much-needed compensation she was owed. The funds have allowed her to pay for her son’s education. In a major class action settlement, over 450 former guestworkers who had returned to Mexico received individual settlement payments through this funds transfer mechanism.

The new edition of the money manual, released electronically and available at the links below, provides updated information, including concrete tips and examples, to help advocates to send settlement funds to their clients in Mexico and facilitate justice across borders.

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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. 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 through education, outreach, and leadership development; intake, evaluation, and referral services; litigation support and direct representation; and policy advocacy. Read more about CDM at www.cdmigrante.org.

Global Workers Justice Alliance (Global Workers) combats worker exploitation by promoting portable justice for transnational migrants through a cross-border network of advocates and resources. Global Workers’ core work involves training and supporting a Defender Network comprised of human rights advocates in the migrant-sending countries to educates workers on their rights before they migrate, partner with advocates in the countries of employment on specific cases of labor exploitation, and engage in national and international policy work for systemic changes to improve conditions for migrants. Global Workers currently operates programs in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua.  Global Workers often provides referrals for case support work outside of these areas. Learn more about Global Workers at www.globalworkers.org

Access the 2nd Edition of the Money Manual at the following links:

www.globalworkers.org/publications/mxmoneymanual2ndEd

For Immediate Release: Migrants Demand Justice

PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release

February 18, 2014

Media Contact:
Kristin Love, Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc.,

+55 5211.9397 (in Mexico), 410-783-0236 (in the U.S.) kristin@cdmigrante.org

On Eve of North American Leaders’ Summit, Migrants Demand Justice

Mexico City– Migrants working under the U.S. H-2 visa programs face grave and systemic labor rights violations.  On the eve of the North American Leaders’ Summit in Toluca, Mexico, where Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, U.S. President Barack Obama, and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper are expected to speak about energy and improving regional trade under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), migrants and their advocates urged that all leaders and governments must act to protect migrants’ rights.

“We see that the rights of Mexican migrants working in the United States continue to be violated,” said Leonardo Cortez Vitela, a leader of the Migrant Defense Committee and a former traveling fair worker who worked in the United States under the H-2B visa program, a non-agricultural work visa program. 66,000 people can work under the H-2B program every year. Most are from Mexico. “Migrants’ rights should be protected. We go to work in the United States, to help U.S. companies with their business. To be exploited like this is an injustice,” Cortez said.

At a press conference today in Mexico City, a transnational coalition of migrants and advocates highlighted that labor and employment violations continue more than a year after the Mexican NAO called for bilateral consultations under the North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation (NAALC), the labor side accord to NAFTA.  To date, the United States has not publicly responded to Mexico’s request for ministerial consultations. Migrant leaders called on the two governments to swiftly address the serious allegations that migrants and their advocates have raised in a series of petitions dating back to 2003.  All of these petitions highlight the lack of enforcement and protections for H-2 workers in the U.S.

The most recent petition, Mex 2011-01, was filed with the Mexican Secretary of Labor and Social Welfare in September 2011 under the NAALC.  Petitioners filed a supplement to Mex 2011-01 in August 2012 and a second supplement today.  “We are calling on the Mexican and U.S. governments to move quickly and finalize a plan for the ministerial consultations and issue a ministerial declaration,” said Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (CDM) Policy Director Sarah Rempel. “While governments continue to delay, migrants suffer.”

In Mex 2011-01, three former traveling fair and carnival workers and several non-governmental organizations from Mexico and the United States alleged that the U.S. government had violated the NAALC because it routinely allows U.S. employers to pay H-2B workers less than the minimum wage and to deny H-2B workers overtime and reimbursements for labor recruitment, travel, and visa costs. Additionally, petitioners argued that H-2 workers face substantial barriers that prevent them from asserting their rights and ensuring that they are enforced. In December 2012, the Mexican National Administrative Office (NAO), an office of the Secretary of Labor and Social Welfare (STPS), sided with the petitioners in a report on Mex 2011-01 and two other public submissions related to migrant workers, and urged the STPS Minister to request ministerial consultations with the U.S. Department of Labor to resolve the violations alleged in the petitions.

Under the NAALC, now in its twentieth year, Canada, Mexico, and the United States are obliged to protect migrant workers’ rights in the same way that the governments protect their nationals in respect of working conditions. At the press conference today, advocates announced that new co-petitioners were joining in support of Mex 2011-01.

########### The following organizations supported today’s press conference:AFL-CIO, Alianza de Trabajadores Agrícolas, Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc., Comité de Defensa del Migrante, Farmworker Justice, Friends of Farmworkers, Inc., Foro Migraciones, La Fundación para la Justicia y el Estado Democrático de Derecho, FUNDAR-Centro de Análisis e Investigación, Global Workers Justice Alliance, Interfaith Worker Justice, Instituto de Estudios y Divulgación Sobre la Migración (INEDIM), Proyecto Jornaleros SAFE, North Carolina Justice Center, Northwest Workers’ Justice Project, Paso del Norte Civil Rights Project, Red Mexicana de Lideres y Organizaciones Migrantes, Respuesta Alternativa, A.C., Southern Poverty Law Center, Sin Fronteras, Southern Poverty Law Center, UFCW Canadá, Workers’ Center of Central New York,Mesa Nacional de Migrantes y Refugiados (Panamá), Instituto Centroamericano de Estudios Sociales y Desarrollo -INCEDES (Guatemala), Grupo de Monitoreo Independiente de El Salvador (GMIES), Instituto Salvadoreño del Migrantes (INSAMI), SOLETERRE, Asociación Salvadoreña de Educación Financiera (ASEFIN), Iglesia episcopal anglicana, Instituto de Derechos Humanos de la UCA (IDHUCA), Iglesia Scabrini, Scalabrini International, Migración Network (El Salvador), Centro Internacional para los Derechos Humanos de los Migrantes (CIDEHUM) (Costa Rica). 

The following people are available for comment:
Lilián López Gracián, Outreach Coordinator, Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc.
Sarah Rempel, Policy Director, Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc.
Martín Davila, Migrant Defense Committee Leader and former H-2B worker
Jessica Stender, Legal Director, Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc.

Press Release: Workers file suit against the U.S. Department Of Labor in Fight for Just Wages

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

December 11, 2013

Workers file suit against the U.S. Department Of Labor in Fight for Just Wages

BALTIMORE, MD– Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc., and allies filed a class action lawsuit in federal court in Pennsylvania today against the Department of Labor (DOL) to ensure that migrant workers receive fair payment of wages.  This past spring DOL began to notify employers that they were required to pay market rate wages to workers with H-2B visas.  DOL recently reversed its policy and decided that employers are allowed to pay migrant workers with H-2B visas wages below the market value for work performed in 2013.  The lawsuit challenges this abrupt change in policy which affects more than 50,000 workers who came to the U.S. on H-2B visas to be employed in jobs in landscaping, construction, and other industries.  The individual plaintiffs in this case worked in forestry and landscaping.

CDM filed this lawsuit with co-counsel Edward Tuddenham, Friends of Farmworkers, Inc., the Southern Poverty Law Center, Northwest Workers’ Justice Project, and Florida Legal Services, Inc.

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Media Contact:

Sarah Karpovich

(410) 783-0236; skarp@cdmigrante.org

Press Release: Farmworker Women Join the Immigration Conversation

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

April 5, 2013

Media contact: Mónica Ramírez, 561-676-3202, monica@cdmigrante.org

Farmworker Women Join the Immigration Conversation

A delegation of more than 60 farmworker women leaders and advocates will meet in Washington, D.C. from April 6 through the 10, 2013 to educate members of Congress about farmworker women’s unique concerns related to the United States’ broken immigration system, including issues related to family separation, discrimination against internationally recruited women workers, and the current anti-immigrant sentiment that exists in the United States. The women are members of Alianza Nacional de Campesinas (National Farmworker Women’s Alliance, in English; Alianza de Campesinas). Members will be traveling from Florida, Arizona, California, Maryland, New Mexico, New York, Oregon and Texas to participate.

“This is a very important moment in history,” said Mily Trevino-Sauceda, President of Alianza Nacional de Campesinas. “Farmworker women are often left out of the conversation about topics like immigration and workers’ rights. We are convening in DC to make sure that we have a chance to educate people about farmworker women’s concerns.”

Alianza de Campesinas members will also meet with federal agency officials, students and members of the public to educate them about the most pressing concerns impacting farmworker women and their families. The delegation will address gender violence against female migrant workers, employment abuses, immigration concerns, pesticide exposure, other health priorities and safety issues.

“We have been organizing for months in order to make this important trip,” said Diana Bustamante, Delegate to Alianza de Campesinas. “Even though it is difficult for many of our members to miss work, find child care and travel to DC, we feel that we have a responsibility to ourselves, our families and our communities to inform the general public about the plight of farmworkers in the U.S.”

Members met in D.C. in October 2012 to officially launch Alianza de Campesinas. In addition to identifying immigration as one of their priority areas, members are also concerned about economic justice, equality, health and safety for all U.S. agricultural workers.

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Alianza Nacional de Campesinas was formed in 2011 after many years of conversations with farmworker women around the United States and in Mexico. Alianza de Campesinas‘ mission is to unify the struggle to promote farm worker women’s leadership in a national movement to create a broader visibility and advocate for changes that ensure their human rights.

The organization is comprised of current or former farmworker women, along with women who hail from farmworker families. Members represent the following organizations: Campesinos Sin Fronteras, Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc., Colonias Development Council, Farmworker Association of Florida, La Mujer Obrera, Organización en California de Líderes Campesinas, Pineros y Campesinos Unidos of Oregon (PCUN), the Rural Coalition and Tierra del Sol Housing Corporation, among others. In addition, several key groups have been instrumental in providing support and planning for Alianza de Campesinas‘ delegation to DC, including Earthjustice, Farmworker Justice, Georgetown University, the Rural Coalition, representatives of the US Department of Agriculture and other federal agencies.

Press Release: Federal Court Orders the U.S. Department of Labor to Stop Using Invalid Wage Determinations for Temporary Workers

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

March 22, 2013

Media Contact: Moravia de la O
Phone: (410) 783-0236
Email: moravia@cdmigrante.org

Federal Court Orders the U.S. Department of Labor to Stop Using Invalid Wage Determinations for Temporary Workers

BALTIMORE, MD- Centro de los Derechos del Migrante, Inc. (The Center for Migrant Rights, or “CDM”) is celebrating a victory in the case Comité de Apoyo a los Trabajadores Agricolas (CATA) v. Solis, et al., Civil No. 2:09-cv-240-LP, 2010 WL 3431761 (E.D. Pa.).  In response to litigation by CDM and co-counsel Edward Tuddenham, Friends of Farmworkers, Inc., North Carolina Justice Center, Northwest Workers’ Justice Project, and the Southern Poverty Law Center, on March 21, 2013 the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania said the Department of Labor (DOL) could no longer use the 2008 invalid wage methodology, which artificially lowers wages so that they no longer represent the market rates.  This decision was issued on the same day that Congress passed a financial plan that continued to block funding for the 2011 prevailing wage rule.  The 2011 prevailing wage rule, if funded, would make wages for many temporary workers consistent with market wages.  The federal court ordered the DOL to come into compliance within 30 days of the ruling.

“By continuing to use the 2008 wage rate calculations, the administration significantly limited workers’ abilities to earn competitive wages in U.S. seasonal industries,” said Rachel Micah-Jones, CDM’s Executive Director. “We were forced to take action against the DOL to ensure a fair wage for the thousands of workers who labor on H-2B visas.  We are pleased that the Court decided ‘enough is enough’ and prohibited the use of a wage methodology that, while still in use, was declared invalid on August 30, 2010.”

CDM with a coalition of immigrants’ rights defenders initiated a federal lawsuit against the DOL on behalf of Salvador Martinez Barrera, a leader of CDM’s Comité de Defensa del Migrante (Migrant Defense Committee), and other workers to challenge the regulations that were issued at the twilight hour of the Bush Administration. Beginning in 2009, the coalition represented plaintiffs against U.S. Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis, Alexander J. Passantino, Janet Napolitano and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.  The lawsuit alleged that the assigned prevailing wage rates artificially lowered temporary workers’ pay below market rates and jeopardized migrant and U.S. workers’ rights.

“This is a very significant step forward for internationally recruited workers who come to the U.S. on H-2B visas,” said Micah-Jones.  “The Court’s ruling brings us closer to ensuring that workers earn the pay that they deserve for all of the hard work that they perform.”