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Posts Tagged ‘braceros

President Bush isn’t going to leave migrant workers empty handed as he leaves the White House. Changes to the H-2A agricultural guestworker program were released in the dark of night, in an attempt to hide their blatant disregard for the lives of others, namely a majority Latino immigrant population.

The changes are horrible. At a time when the jobless rate is at a 15 year high, they reduce obligations for growers to effectively recruit U.S. workers before applying to bring in guestworkers for these jobs. They lower the wage rates for all farmworkers by changing the program’s wage formula and, in an industry known for labor abuses, they eliminate or reduce government oversight.

So while the anti-immigrant advocates point their fingers at immigrants for the U.S.’s current economic problems, the current administration hits hard against ALL workers, in terms of wages and rights.

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Justice for the Braceros

4:15 pm By Maegan La Mala · Activism · Comments Off

29 Nov 2005

bracero.jpg

A labor agreement between Mexico and the United States allowed nearly 2.5 million Mexican workers to come to this country beginning in 1942 to alleviate the severe labor shortages caused by World War II. Under the agreement, the workers were to contribute 10 percent of their paychecks to a pension fund, but the money, estimated in the millions of dollars, disappeared in bureaucratic mazes.

It seems that there will never be justice for the braceros. It seems that the guilty parties are simply waiting for this generation to pass away in order to wipe their hands clean of the thievery that was committed against these former farmworkers. Who kept the money that was due to the braceros? Was it the Mexican government? Was it the U.S. government? Was it the farming companies that exploited this source of cheap labor? Most likely it was a combination of all three.

Last month, the Mexican government finally issued rules on how it would distribute a newly created fund designated to compensate workers for a pension fund that never materialized: in payments of 38,000 pesos (about $3,600 U.S.) to each former bracero.

Understandably many braceros have refused this payment from the Mexican government stating that what they are owed is much more. It’s disgraceful how these workers continue to be treated.

Via / Monterey Herald

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VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.

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