New Orleans Workers' Center for Racial Justice

Building worker power, advancing racial justice, and organizing workers to build a social movement in post-Katrina New Orleans
  • Home
  • Press Releases
    • Federal judge orders Sheriff Gusman to release immigrant detainee from illegal custody – 11/15/10
    • Immigrant Workers Hit Sheriff with Federal Suit in Campaign to Win Right to Remain in New Orleans – 2/2/11
    • 2/7/11 Community Condemns Sheriff’s Intimidation of Community Leaders During Prayer Vigil
    • 4/20/2011 EEOC SUES MAJOR LABOR TRAFFICKER, VINDICATES GUESTWORKERS
    • Low-Income Residents Sue Housing Authority of New Orleans – 9/29/09
    • Guestworkers Urge Secretary of Labor Solis to Revoke Exploitative Bush Administration Regulations – 2/24/09
    • Guestworkers Launch Strike To Expose Tennessee Employer Who Violated Federal Law – 2/18/09
    • MN Congressman to fast for Indian workers detained in Fargo, demands their release 12/17/08
    • Guestworkers sue major Louisiana grower for labor trafficking, slave-like conditions – 12/10/08
    • ICE Raid Targets, Snares Human Trafficking Victims – 10/29/08
    • Indian trafficking survivors suspend hunger strike on Day 29 after huge political gains – 6/11/08
    • ‘Hunger strike strongman' Paul Konar forced to end fast on Day 23 after hospitalization – 06/05/08
    • Top US Congressman for Indian affairs vows to help Indian hunger strikers on Day 23 of fast – 6/4/08
    • Indian hunger strikers confront US Congress over H2B guest worker program expansion – 5/21/08
    • Indian Embassy feasts while hunger strikers starve – 05/17/08
    • Indian labor trafficking survivors to launch hunger strike in view of the White House – 5/14/08
    • 100 satyagrahis grill Indian Ambassador during three-hour meeting – 3/27/08
    • Indian human trafficking survivors tear up guest worker visas at White House rally – 3/21/08
  • About NOWCRJ
    • STAND with Dignity
    • Congress of Day Laborers
    • Alliance of Guestworkers For Dignity
    • Legal Department
  • NOWCRJ in the News
    • Congress of Day Laborers
      • Protesters Demanded the Release of 22 year old Antonio Ocampo, Vanessa Bolano Reports 11/15/10
      • 3/22/10 The Gambit – Stolen Paychecks
      • 11/20/09 The Times-Picayune – Cops falter in Hispanic outreach: Hassles reported despite Riley pledge
      • 8/28/09 NPR – New Orleans: A Day's Work Doesn't Mean A Day's Pay
      • 8/7/09 The New York Times – Detention Reform
      • 8/5/09 Latin American Herald Tribune – Detained Immigrants Continue Hunger Strike
      • 8/5/09 Univision – Detenidos en Luisiana continúan huelga de hambre para denunciar condiciones
      • 8/4/09 Media-Newswire – Groups Call On Napolitano To Fix Conditions At Louisiana Immigration Detention Facility
      • 8/3/09 ISS – Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. detention facility
      • 8/1/09 The New York Times – Detained and Abused
      • 8/1/09 New America Media – Immigrant Detainees Stage Hunger Strikes in LouisianaAugust
      • 7/31/09 Feet In 2 Worlds – Immigrant Detainees on Hunger Strike After White House Rejects Change to Detention Standards/J
      • 7/31/09 Associated Press – Immigration detention conditions poor, hunger strikers sayJuly
      • 7/1/09 The Times-Picayune – Day Laborers Call for Action on Wage Theft
      • 7/1/09 WDSU – Councilman Wants to Stop 'Wage Theft' From Workers
      • 6/30/09 Fox 8 News – City Council Promises Help to Unpaid Day Laborers
      • 6/30/09 The Times-Picayune – Laborers Pack N.O. City Council Chambers to Support Wage-Theft Legislation
      • 6/30/09 WWLTV – Day Laborers, Huge Task in Region for Wage Theft, Ask Council for Help
      • 5/1/09 The Times Picayune – Workers Decry "Wage Theft" In Protest At City Hall
      • 3/7/07 The Times-Picayune – Worker's fears prove to be prophetic: 'He hated going under the houses'
    • Alliance of Guest Workers
      • 4/20/10 People's World – Power Act would curb worker abuse, senator says
      • 4/22/10 The New York Times – If You Were a Guest Worker, What Would You Do?
      • 2/4/10 The New York Times – A Bitter Guest Worker Story
      • 2/3/10 The Huffington Post – ICE and Big Business: Too Close for Comfort
      • 2/2/10 The New York Times – Suit Points to Guest Worker Program Flaws
      • 4/20/09 The Associated Press – Suit claims foreign workers faced poor conditions
      • 12/25/08 Miami New Times News – Bolivian Workers Scammed: The odyssey of 24 laborers flown to Miami and then left to their own devices.
      • 12/10/08 Associated Press – FBI Probes treatment of Mexican workers in LA
      • 11/20/08 Project Censored – Guest Workers Inc.: Fraud and Human Trafficking
      • 6/7/08 The New York Times – Workers on Hunger Strike Say They Were Misled on Visas
      • 5/15/08 American News Project – Immigrant Laborers in Limbo
      • 3/27/08 BBC News South Asia – Indian men in US 'slave' protest
      • 3/15/08 Hindustan Times – India Mulls Law to Stop Rogue Recruiters
      • 3/11/08 The New York Times – Workers Sue Gulf Coast Company That Imported Them
      • 3/11/08 Hindustan Times – Workers Sue US firm, India cracks down on recruiters
      • 3/10/08 Hindustan Times – US dream lost in packed dorms, stink of stale food
      • 3/10/08 NPR – 'Guest Workers' Sue Mississippi Shipyard
      • 3/7/08 ABC News – Revolt in Mississippi: Indian Workers Claim 'Slave Treatment'
      • 3/14/07 Time Magazine – Guest Workers Fighting Back
    • STAND with Dignity
      • 09/21/2008 The New York Times – Never Again, Again
      • 10/6/09 The Times-Picayune – HUD sending in turnaround team to tackle problems at HANO
      • 9/30/09 The Times-Picayune – HANO is sued over public records request
      • 9/6/09 The Times-Picayune – HANO audits points to a still-troubled agency
      • 7/18/09 The Times-Picayune – New Orleans residents are waiting for Section 8 answers
      • 7/16/09 The Times-Picayune – Protestors ask HANO for Vouchers
      • 7/15/09 The Times-Picayune – HANO Protest Video
      • 10/6/08 City Business – Off the Hook: City Works to Iron Out Wrinkles in Info Hotline
      • 9/23/08 The Times-Picayune – Shelter System will be Retooled, Official Vows
      • 9/15/08 The Associated Press – La. DSS Secretary Resigns Over Gustav Response
        • 9/10/08 The Seattle Medium – Displaced Poor Still Returning to New Orleans as Saints Go Marching In
      • 9/7/08 The New York Times – No Shelter From the Storm
  • Documents
    • Letter from Alliance of Guestworkers for Dignity to Secretary of Labor Solis
    • Reports
    • Legal documents
  • Blog
  • Gallery
  • Contribute
  • TAKE ACTION!
  • Contact
    • Position Announcements
    • Legal Volunteers/Interns
    • Volunteer

2/2/10 The New York Times – Suit Points to Guest Worker Program Flaws

February 2, 2010
Suit Points to Guest Worker Program Flaws
by Julia Preston, The New York Times

Immigration authorities worked closely with a marine oil-rig company in Mississippi to discourage protests by temporary guest workers from India over their job conditions, including advising managers to send some workers back to India, according to new testimony in a federal lawsuit against the company, Signal International.

The cooperation between the company and federal immigration agents is recounted in sworn depositions by Signal managers who were involved when tensions in its shipyard in Pascagoula, Miss., erupted into a public clash in March 2007.

Since then, hundreds of the Indian workers have brought a civil rights lawsuit against the company, claiming they were victims of human trafficking and labor abuse. Signal International is fighting the suit and has sued American and Indian recruiters who contracted with the workers in India. The company claims the recruiters misled it – and the workers – about the terms of the work visas that brought them to this country.

The Departments of Justice and Homeland Security have opened separate investigations. The federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission determined in September that there was “reasonable cause” to believe the Indian guest workers at Signal had faced discrimination and a work environment “laced with ridicule and harassment.”

The Signal case has come to represent some of the flaws and pitfalls, for immigrants and for employers, in the H-2B temporary guest worker program. As Congressional lawmakers weigh moving forward this year on an overhaul of the immigration system, they are debating whether to include an expansion of guest worker programs.

A lawyer for Signal, Erin C. Hangartner, said the company could not comment on the suit.

As it rushed to repair offshore oil rigs after Hurricane Katrina, Signal International hired about 500 skilled metalworkers from India in 2006. Numerous workers have said that they paid as much as $20,000 to Signal’s recruiters, many going into debt or selling their homes. They said recruiters had promised that their visas would soon be converted to green cards, allowing them to remain as permanent residents.

Once the workers realized they would not receive green cards, many complained of fraud and banded together to seek help from American lawyers.

In a deposition in the lawsuit, filed in Federal District Court in New Orleans, Signal’s chief operating officer, Ronald Schnoor, said he grew frustrated with Indian workers who were “chronic whiners.” In early 2007 he decided to fire several who were encouraging protests.

Those workers “were making impossible demands” for the company to secure green cards for them or to repay the high fees, Mr. Schnoor said. They were “taking workers away from their work and actually trying to get them to join some effort they were organizing,” he said.

Mr. Schnoor and Darrell Snyder, a manager in the shipyard, where the Indians were living in a labor camp, said they had consulted with agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement for “guidance” on how to fire the workers, following the rules of the H-2B program.

Mr. Schnoor said the “direction” he received from an immigration enforcement agent was this: “Don’t give them any advance notice. Take them all out of the line on the way to work; get their personal belongings; get them in a van, and get their tickets, and get them to the airport, and send them back to India.”

Signal managers said they tried to carry out those instructions on March 9, 2007, putting several Indian workers into vans to take them to the airport. They were prevented from leaving the shipyard by immigrant advocates gathered at the gates.

In an internal e-mail message 10 days later, Mr. Snyder reported that another immigration official had assured him in a meeting that day that the agency would pursue any Indian workers who left their jobs, “if for no other reason than to send a message to the remaining workers that it is not in their best interests to try and ‘push’ the system.”

Carl Falstrom, an immigration lawyer in New Orleans who is not associated with the Signal case, said there were rules for employers who fired guest workers. They are required to provide return airfare to the workers’ home countries, and they are supposed to notify the visa agency, Citizenship and Immigration Services, when workers are no longer employed. But, Mr. Falstrom said, private companies cannot carry out deportations.

Saket Soni, director of the New Orleans Workers’ Center for Racial Justice, which represents some workers in the lawsuit, said the managers’ testimony showed that immigration enforcement agents had “advised the corporation on how to retaliate against workers who were organizing.”

An ICE spokesman, Brian Hale, said he could not comment on a continuing investigation. But Mr. Hale said ICE agents were generally aware that a company that fires workers in the H-2B program “is prohibited from compelling individuals to get on the plane.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/02/us/02immig.html

Comments rss
Comments rss
Trackback
Trackback

Leave a Reply

Click here to cancel reply.

Sign the petition!

Join us in asking Secretary Janet Napolitano to stop deporting labor, civil, and human rights leaders!button

DONATE TODAY!

Click to make a secure donation.

donate

Search

ABOUT NOWCRJ

The New Orleans Workers’ Center for Racial Justice is dedicated to organizing workers across race and industry to build the power and participation of workers and communities. We organize day laborers, guestworkers, and homeless residents to build movement for dignity and rights in the post-Katrina landscape.

Recent Posts

  • Hundreds March Demand End To Deportations in New Orleans – 5/2/13
  • Thank You!
  • Immigrant Workers Hit Sheriff with Federal Suit in Campaign to Win Right to Remain in New Orleans
  • Through My Eyes: Louisiana's First Independent Evacuation Shelter Monitoring Report
  • Detention Conditions and Human Rights Under the Obama Administration
rss Comments rss valid xhtml 1.1 design by jide powered by Wordpress get firefox