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Senators Feinstein, Craig, Kennedy, Martinez, Boxer, Voinovich Introduce AgJOBS Bill to Address Agri PDF Print E-mail

Washington, DC – U.S. Senators Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), Larry Craig (R-Idaho), Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), Mel Martinez (R-Fla.), Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), and George Voinovich (R-Ohio) today introduced legislation to address the growing agriculture worker shortage.

The AgJOBS bill would establish a pilot earned adjustment program for agriculture workers, which would help to ease the severe worker shortage being experienced by frustrated farmers across the country.

“Today, many American farmers are on a precipice. And whether they survive to plant another season is determined largely on one simple question:  will there be enough workers to bring in the harvest?” Senator Feinstein said. “There are plenty of people willing and able to do the work.  And these workers deserve to be treated with dignity and respect.”

“The AgJOBS bill is a two-part bill. Part one would create a pilot program to identify undocumented agricultural workers and legalize the immigration status for those who have been working in the United States for the past two years or more. The second part would create a more usable H-2A program to implement a realistic and effective guest worker program.”

 

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Illegal immigration debate draws crowd PDF Print E-mail
Cherokee holding public hearing on landlord crackdown


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
 

The nationwide debate over illegal immigration came to Cherokee County Tuesday night, with people on both sides of the debate weighing in on a controversial proposal to target landlords who rent to people in the United States without permission.

About 130 people crowded into a meeting room for a hearing on a proposal that stirred strong but restrained emotion, with spectators applauding speakers pro and con.

Supporters saluted the commissioners and spoke of the need to uphold the rule of law, while opponents questioned the ordinance's legality and said illegal immigrants contribute to the economy.

The arguments mirrored those made nationwide, as local governments increasingly find themselves grappling with an issue that has resisted quick fixes in Congress.

 

 

—Staff writers Christian Boone and Mark Bixler contributed to this report.

 
 
 
 
Find this article at:
http://www.ajc.com/services/content/metro/cherokee/stories/2006/11/21/1122cheroimmigration.html
 
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TARGET 9: Illegal Labor PDF Print E-mail

Local officials are joining forces and working harder than ever to send a strong message—that illegal immigrants and illegal workers will not be tolerated in the Ohio Valley.

 

Interstate 70 is known to be a major pipeline that brings many illegal immigrants crossing through the area.

 

Recently more than 90 illegal immigrants have been busted in Ohio County, but not all of them were just passing through.

 

"Everyone says we have an illegal immigrant problem, and I'm here to tell you we don't. We have an illegal employer problem," said Delegate Orphy Klempa.

 

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Employers fined for hiring illegal immigrants PDF Print E-mail
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) -- A Wichita manufacturing company, its owner and a general manager were ordered Monday to pay fines totaling $210,000 for knowingly hiring illegal immigrants, but the employers were spared prison time despite the judge's misgivings in the case.

As part of a plea bargain, Bob Eisel Powder Coatings and its owner and president, Bob Eisel, pleaded guilty in August to a single count of making false written statements to the government. General manager Kenric ''Butch'' Steinert also pleaded guilty to the same charge.

In addition to the fines, U.S. District Judge Wesley Brown sentenced Eisel and Steinert to three years' probation.






 

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) -- A Wichita manufacturing company, its owner and a general manager were ordered Monday to pay fines totaling $210,000 for knowingly hiring illegal immigrants, but the employers were spared prison time despite the judge's misgivings in the case.

As part of a plea bargain, Bob Eisel Powder Coatings and its owner and president, Bob Eisel, pleaded guilty in August to a single count of making false written statements to the government. General manager Kenric ''Butch'' Steinert also pleaded guilty to the same charge.

In addition to the fines, U.S. District Judge Wesley Brown sentenced Eisel and Steinert to three years' probation.






 
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Builders face illegal immigrant charges PDF Print E-mail

Five construction contractors are facing trial on charges alleging they allowed illegal immigrants to work on their job sites.

At a hearing Monday, U.S. District Judge David Bunning turned down a request to delay the proceedings, and said trial would begin Nov. 27.

Federal agents in May raided several Fischer Homes work sites and arrested nearly 100 people, most of them Mexican or Central American nationals.

Five Fischer Homes supervisors were charged with conspiring to harbor illegal immigrants.

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