Upcoming Events - HB87 In Effect July 1, 2011

Georgia Anti Immigration Bill Goes into Effect July 1, 2011

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

June 15, 2011

AALAC denounces Republican lawmakers mandatory nationwide employer use of E-Verify sponsored by Lamar Smith of Texas 



Should this become law it will drive both employers and employees further underground.  Substantial tax revenue will be lost.  Fewer employers will offer health insurance, so fewer people will have it.  That will create a greater burden on medical providers and hospitals.  This will have a ripple effect throughout the economy and country.  Thumbs Down!

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Atlanta Journal -

Survey suggests farm labor shortage in Georgia.  

Governor Deal has a "partial" solution - in the corrections system.  

According to many, HB87, the Anti - Immigration Bill passed earlier this year has caused migrant farm workers to avoid Georgia.  Farmers don't have the labor needed to harvest the crops of hand picked vegetables and fruits.  

Governor Deal wants to draft unemployed former prisoners who are on probation and parole.  Some minds harken back to the days of the Georgia Chain Gang.  Others fear the need for labor will cause more arrests and convictions in order to meet seasonal labor demands.  One in 13 Georgians are already under the umbrella of the Criminal Justice System.  It's one of the highest rates in the Nation.  

The crops now rotting in the field had been planted when HB87 was signed.  Some wonder if prisoners will be enlisted to plant next season crops or if farmers will switch to other crops which can be harvested by machines.  

This might be a short term,  temporary "fix" but has many flaws.  Prisoners aren't farmers, few have the skill set needed to plant and harvest a wide variety of fruits and vegetables.  It's a migrant job meaning those with criminal records will be moving from one community to the next.  


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PolitiFacts Says Georgia Agriculture Commissioner Wage Figures for Farm Workers are...



Sunday, June 5, 2011

ICE Raids Net Innocent People



 This article seems a bit vague, but that could be because the reporter was getting conflicting information. 
 FORT MORGAN, Colo. (AP) - U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials in a statement announced the arrest of 11 people in Fort Morgan. KUSA-TV reports that the raids took place at Wildcat Dairy that resulted in 40 other people being detained but later let go. The station reports that 50 of the dairy's 60 workers are gone.
 Not only are the cows distressed, no doubt many people are as well.  FORTY (yes, 40) were apparently detained and eventually released, and eleven (11) were arrested.  That seems like a WIDE sweep.   Did those 40  workers decide working where they may be targeted wasn't worth the emotional toll on their well-being? 

Police Chief Keith Kuretich (KEHR-etch) and dairy owner Ed Wilgenburg did not immediately return messages left by The Associated Press.  

ICE says 20 egregious violators were indicted by a state grand jury on accusations that they possessed or used fraudulent "green cards" and Social Security cards to obain employment in the United States.
Is it that ICE could find only 11 of the 20 indicted people?  Or was information later deemed to be faulty resulting in the other 9 being released?