![]()
A writer for the paper got herself hired at Fresh Del Monte Produce and then wrote about it last month.
The story of federal agents rounding up 167 workers in North Portland's Fresh Del Monte Produce plant is big stuff, both in terms of the raid's size and its timing, as lawmakers are struggling to create immigration reforms.
The arrest of the workers by 160 federal agents comes after a six-month investigation of the employment agency that funnels workers to Del Monte, North Carolina-based American Staffing Resources. The feds say the two conspired to hire undocumented workers, using fake Social Security numbers and other dodges. If the news took many Portlanders by surprise, Willamette Week writer Beth Slovic is probably not among them. In May, Slovic wrote "Chop Shop," a cover story for the paper in which she got herself hired at the plant and wrote about the experience. The subhead on her story: "In a town that cares about food and human rights, WW finds a hidden world of illegal immigrants."
Her story was notable for its Upton Sinclair-like descriptions of the plant conditions and the quick surfacing of the illegal-worker issue:
Three of them volunteered to me on our lunch break that they don't have papeles (papers), a sort of polite shorthand for saying they are illegal immigrants. Despite this, one of them tells me she has been cutting broccoli for Del Monte for four years.
Willamette Week updated that story with a brief posting after the raid, quoting a local immigration lawyer who set the number rounded up at closer to 200 – meaning either his count was off or several people caught in the net were quickly released.
One can only imagine the feds, then running their own secret investigation, reading Slovic's story with horror. Nothing like having the nosy local alt-weekly say the things you plan to say, only a month earlier and without government-speak.
Portland Mayor Tom Potter is fuming about the raid. An editorial in The Oregonian, "Give us reforms, not raids," quotes him: "To go after local workers who are here to support their families while filling the demands of local businesses for their labor is bad policy." The paper's editorialists agree with Potter, wondering what such a raid actually accomplishes beyond tearing immigrant families apart.
Comments:
Posted Wed, Jun 13, 7:46 a.m. Inappropriate
I'm no fan of George Bush, but even he, rightly, realizes the importance of that issue.
However the enforcement of current law as it applies to employers would do much to improve the situation - in this Del Monte case, as well as generally.
Throwing people in jail who are working for US is shameful.
There are a couple of sleeper issues here too - North American Trade and the National ID card/Patriot Act.
Unfortunately the Congress' unwillingness to fully deal with corruption in their ranks makes their credibility in dealing with these difficult issues questionable.
How about we throw some of the real BUMS out, or in Jail, and we keep the folks that LIKE to work.
Methinks it may well be time to pull a 'Under the Tuscan Sun' chapter somewhere's in Mexico.
Who knows, maybe I can even get Alberto Gonzales as an Attorney. I hear he might be available.
-Douglas Tooley
Tacoma, WA
Posted Wed, Jun 13, 10:13 a.m. Inappropriate
RE: American Justice?: Douglas - if it makes you feel any better, I heard on the radio this morning that three employees of the staffing agency were arrested.
Posted Thu, Jun 14, 6:06 a.m. Inappropriate
Portland has an ongoing affordable housing crisis, exascerbated by the presence of perhaps thousands who are in the city unlawfully.
Will the city's Crisis Response Team be activated to assist families affected by the affordable housing crisis?
Posted Sat, Jun 16, 8:21 a.m. Inappropriate
-D