Saturday, June 30, 2007

César Chávez, 2.0

In the wake of the immigration disaster, this is very interesting:
A center representing immigrant workers who do temporary jobs announced its affiliation with the AFL-CIO Thursday, becoming the first day labor center to act on an agreement between the largest U.S. federation of unions and a network representing immigrant laborers.

The Centro Legal de la Raza hopes the association with the AFL-CIO's Alameda County Central Labor Council will help improve working conditions for the immigrant workers it represents. Like other day laborers who solicit jobs by standing on corners and waiting for employers to pick them up, these workers often have little recourse when an employer refuses to pay or expects them to work under dangerous conditions.
Fundamentally and abstractly, this is great news; an abused constituency of hard workers are getting protection and a voice. That's at the core of the labor movement. Right now, there are 80 worker centers nationwide with over 140,000 workers, and with no immigration deal in place, there is going to be a growing number of these type of workers, and a growing number of employers looking to abuse and underpay them. Getting them organized can help them end the horrible employer conditions under which they have to work, and it creates a whole new field that unions can organize.

But that growth in workers is also part of why this is such a two-sided proposition. The AFL-CIO opposed the immigration deal that collapsed this week in the Senate, with three main concerns:
  • It lacks an effective and reliable employment-verification system.
  • The penalties and sanctions for employers who violate the law are weak.
  • The new guest worker provisions will provide further incentive for employers to drive down wages and benefit standards for all who work in the U.S. construction industry.
  • Additionally, they objected to the guest worker provisions that let companies bring in high tech and high skilled workers at wages much below prevailing ones in the area, as they continue to layoff fairly paid American workers. But the first three issues are the ones that apply to this situation.

    Basically, the AFL-CIO is taking a stand against the hiring of undocumented immigrants at bottom barrel poverty-level wages, and want greater penalties on employers that do so. However, they are very sure to point out that they are pro-path to citizenship, because it is the right and humane thing to do. So what you have is not opposition to a bigger workforce, but opposition to an unfair work environment, which is where I think a lot of Americans are.

    But this unionization of the work center is interesting because until some immigration deal is brought up again and actually agreed on (don't hold your breath on that being any time soon), the AFL-CIO will be accepting and representing the undocumented workers they believe are driving down wages and taking jobs by working for so little. This would be a paradox if not for the fact that
    the AFL-CIO is apparently taking the stance that it is employers' fault for paying such substandard wages, and they are sympathetic with the workers who are forced to work for them. And I think that is the best way to look at it; after all, despite whatever verbal vomit the right wing echo chamber may spew out, undocumented workers are just trying to do anything they can to better their and their families' economic conditions and lifestyles. And if working for substandard wages is all they can do with their lack of knowledge of the language and the poor to non-existent schools in their home countries, then that's what they'll do.

    So here's what I take from this: the AFL-CIO sees that there is no hope of a mass worker registration that would help force employers to pay living wages, nor is there any hope for any real penalties for hiring undocumented workers. So, they are going to take the situation into their own hands and work to represent these workers, fighting to raise their wages while evening the playing field for native born workers, all the while growing the union ranks. Win Win Win.

    1 comment:

    Anonymous said...

    Great points Jordan. Unfortunately the right wing tends to parse these things into sound bite response, so we have to be able to counter their mis-information campaigns using the same methods. I think you need a snappy slogan for this.