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AN OPEN LETTER TO BARACK OBAMA
Dear President Obama:
As you begin to take on the issue of immigration reform,
we call on you to provide the leadership necessary to repeal
the modern-day slave law that has devastated the lives of
so many working people in this country: the Employer Sanctions
Provisions. We write on behalf of communities of citizen and
immigrant workers who are organizing to improve our conditions.
We have seen how even before the economic crisis came to a
head, because of Employer Sanctions, conditions for working
people in the U.S. had grown worse than ever.
Employer Sanctions was part of a law passed under the Reagan
Administration during the immigration reform in 1986. This
law is a sanction on employers in name only. In reality, "Employer
Sanctions" criminalizes immigrants by creating an underclass
of labor with no rights or protections under the law. Ever
since the first chattel slave laws in this country were abolished,
there have been new laws that have adjusted to current economic
conditions in order to reinstitute slavery in new forms. As
we see today, it doesn't take physical chains to enslave workers.
Like the slave laws before, under Employer Sanctions undocumented
workers are stripped of the freedom to sell their own labor.
The result of this modern slave law is deteriorating conditions
for everyone. Because of this law, the underground economy
is expanding, dividing native-born, documented and undocumented
workers. It has created cutthroat competition and keeps workers
from organizing together, causing all workers' wages to plummet
and making life unbearably hard. Good jobs have become bad
jobs, and unionizing is undermined time and time again because
documented workers are forced to compete with an underclass
of labor that has no rights. Not only workers, but even law-abiding
businesses can no longer survive.
Some are proposing stronger Employer Sanctions Provisions,
claiming that this slave law is a good law just enforced badly.
They advocate for stronger, harsher punishments for employers.
But we have seen that stronger enforcement will only push
the underclass further underground, not eliminate it. It will
push conditions down further and faster, making it impossible
for workers to survive--creating increased mass unemployment,
while forcing others to be completely overworked. This law
should not be amended, it should be abolished.
All undocumented workers should be provided with a means
to adjust their immigration status, but not at the expense
of criminalizing others who come afterward. The proposed legalization
and guestworker programs will open a path for some undocumented
to get papers. However, these measures are like paroling a
few pardoned criminals out of jail while incarcerating thousands
more. This will create another layer of slave labor. It will
only further the effects of employer sanctions, expanding
the underclass and continuing the deterioration of conditions
for all workers.
You have announced that in May you will begin discussing
immigration reform proposals. We are calling on you, as the
Chief of State to this nation, to:
1. Repeal Employer Sanctions Provisions
2. Legislate Equal Rights for All Workers
3. Create an on-going mechanism for undocumented workers to
adjust their status.
Repealing employer sanctions will be a bold step towards
justice and send a strong message that our country is finally
ready to eliminate slavery once and for all. This will pave
the way for workers to come together, native-born and immigrant,
to organize for a better life for us all.
Signed:
Break The Chains Alliance
and endorsing organizations
Chinese Staff & Workers' Association - New York, NY
National Mobilization Against SweatShops - New York, NY
Border Workers Association - El Paso, TX
Chicago Workers' Collaborative - Chicago, IL
Somali Justice Advocacy Center - Minneapolis, MN
Border Agricultural Workers Project - El Paso, TX
Tonatierra Community Development Organization - Phoenix, AZ
1. Examples of this include the Northern "free states"
before the Civil War where slaves from the South fled to escape
slavery, but needed a document declaring they were freed slaves
in order to work; the Jim Crow laws; the Chinese Exclusion
Act; the Bracero Program.
Contact the Break the Chains Alliance at info@breakthechainsnow.org,
or c/o NMASS at nmass@yahoo.com or (212)358-0295
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