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March 24 Protest. We were there!


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BREAKING NEWS
U.S., Mexican governors discuss immigration law PDF Print E-mail
Immigration Reform
Friday, 25 August 2006


Annual summit of border state leaders addresses drug smuggling, role of the National Guard

By Miguel Bustillo

LOS ANGELES TIMES

AUSTIN, Texas - The governors of California, Texas, Arizona and New Mexico made stopping illegal immigration a central theme at their annual meeting Thursday with governors from Mexico's border states.

The focus on illegal immigration at a gathering typically dominated by nonconfrontational topics such as boosting trade and cleaning up the environment demonstrated the increasing desire of American politicians to show that they are doing something to address the issue in an election year.

"We had some serious discussions in the private meeting. Border security issues were at the top of the list," said Texas Gov. Rick Perry, a Republican who has been touting tougher measures against illegal immigration as he campaigns for re-election.

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Illegal Alien Employers Will Face Lawsuits for Unfair Business Practices PDF Print E-mail
Employer updates
Wednesday, 23 August 2006

 

Jim Kouri

With the federal government's failure to curtail the onslaught of illegal aliens into the United States, coupled with the inaction of lawmakers in Washington, DC to pass real immigration reform, some Americans are looking at legal alternatives to thwart illegal immigration and those who facilitate it.
In addition, more and more Americans are recognizing that state governments aren't doing anything to curb illegal immigration, and, in fact, several states even aid illegal aliens or provide incentives. Also employers who hire illegal aliens create the driving force for illegals to enter the US in order to secure gainful employment.

For years, employers in California have known that they could hire illegal aliens without having to worry very much about as far as being prosecuted for breaking the law. Soon, however, they may have something serious to worry about: their competitors taking legal action against them.

According to legal experts, a Californian civil law includes a provision for a company that knowingly employs illegal aliens to be sued by competitors who have suffered economic damages as a result of such an illegal practice. When a construction company, for instance, uses minimum wage workers who are illegal aliens to underbid competitors in order to secure work contracts, those companies who hire Americans and legal "green card" immigrants and pay fair wages will be able to sue the illegal aliens' employer in a court of law.

 

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Immigration debate headed to court PDF Print E-mail
Employer updates
Wednesday, 23 August 2006

PETER PRENGAMAN

Associated Press
LOS ANGELES - Frustrated businesses took their fight against illegal immigration to court Tuesday, filing the first in a series of lawsuits accusing competitors of hiring illegal workers to achieve an unfair advantage.

Anti-illegal immigration groups said the lawsuits were an attempt to enforce immigration law by creating a deterrent against hiring illegal employees.

"We see the legal profession bringing to this issue the kind of effect it has had on consumer product safety," said Mike Hethmon of the Immigration Reform Law Institute, a Washington D.C.-based group backing the California cases.

In the complaint filed Tuesday, a temporary employment agency that supplies farm workers sued a grower and two competing companies.

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Suit Targets Hiring of Illegal Farmworkers PDF Print E-mail
Employer updates
Wednesday, 23 August 2006

A Santa Monica temp agency alleges a grower and two firms violated a state law on unfair
competition by using undocumented workers.

By Molly Selvin


Opponents of illegal immigration are using a new legal tactic: Suing businesses that allegedly hire illegal workers, contending they gain an unfair competitive advantage.

In a complaint filed Monday, a Santa Monica-based temporary employment agency that supplies legal farmworkers sued a Central Valley blueberry grower and two other companies. The agency contends that the grower hired illegal workers, violating a contract to use the agency's employees.

The California lawsuit is believed to be the first based on the state's unfair-competition law, legal experts said. Although the case may be difficult to win, they said, it seeks to highlight widespread criticisms that the federal government is ineffective in enforcing laws barring the hiring of illegal workers.

 

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Illegal-immigration vigilance hindered by employer restraints PDF Print E-mail
Employer updates
Tuesday, 22 August 2006


BY JIM FABER, The Island Packet

 When Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents found problems last month with the citizenship status of 43 employees of the Hilton Head Island Bi-Lo store, questions were raised as to why the store didn't check out their employees more thoroughly.

But, according to experts, just about any business could find itself in the same position.

Properly completing citizen and identity verification forms, called the I-9 form, is all a business can, and probably should, do in attempting to thwart fraud from those seeking employment illegally, according to a local immigration law expert and the government's guidelines.

"Employers are not required to be immigration experts," said Melissa Azallion, a labor and immigration lawyer with the Hilton Head office of the law firm Nexsen Pruet. "They are required to use a reasonable good-faith effort to examine those documents."

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Ready One may let 150 garment workers go PDF Print E-mail
Employer updates
Tuesday, 22 August 2006

David Crowder / El Paso Times  
 
As many as 150 garment workers at Ready One Industries, formerly El Paso's National Center for Employment of the Disabled, could be laid off in coming weeks, company spokesman Marc Schwartz said Monday.

“We issued ... notices last week to all Ready One employees as a direct result of the fact that it has taken longer than expected for the Defense Supply Center in Philadelphia to issue new contracts,” Schwartz said.

The layoffs will probably begin this week, he said.

Layoffs at Ready One's new sister company, Paloma Industries, are also expected, Schwartz said.

The former NCED had its defense contracts for Army combat uniforms suspended in March because of an investigation into allegations that the nonprofit was violating federal regulations pertaining to the amount of work being performed by NCED's disabled employees.

 

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