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  1. #1
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    {Sob} Ike clean-up workers report wage theft

    Ike clean-up workers report wage theft
    By MONICA RHOR Associated Press Writer © 2008 The Associated Press
    Dec. 2, 2008, 4:33PMShare
    Print Email Del.icio.usDiggTechnoratiYahoo! BuzzHOUSTON — First came Hurricane Ike, then came the abuse after the storm: hundreds of workers hired to clean up debris, repair damaged roofs and restore flood-soaked buildings say they were robbed of wages, stranded with nowhere to stay and injured on the job.

    The pattern, first seen after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans, is now being repeated in Houston and other Texas Gulf Coast cities ravaged by Ike, say Houston worker advocates.

    In some cases, the same employers cited for worker abuse in Katrina have also turned up in worker complaints in Texas, according to the Houston Interfaith Worker Justice Center.

    The complaints range from workers brought in from other cities and promised housing, then forced to sleep outdoors on concrete sidewalks to others who contracted skin infections, eye infections and rashes from working in contaminated buildings with no protective gear.

    In addition, many workers say they have been victimized by employers who refused to pay wages or paid less than promised, said Laura Boston, an organizer with the Interfaith Worker Justice Center.

    "These workers helped clean up the city, and helped it get back on its feet. For two or three weeks, they waded through contaminated water, or through flooded buildings, then they were abandoned," said Francisco Arguelles, the center's training coordinator.

    "We have seen people who are desperate. They couldn't buy food, or medicine for their kids or parents. They are going to be evicted from apartments and sometimes have to decide between buying food or paying rent."

    The Interfaith Worker Justice Center, which works for the rights of low-wage workers, said it can take months to recover stolen wages in successful cases. In nine out of 10 cases, however, the wages are not recovered.

    The center cited six post-Ike cases in which workers were denied hundreds of thousands of dollars in pay or left without lodging.

    One Florida-based company, Timberwood Carpentry, recruited 1,000 workers from Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, Georgia and Texas for clean-up work in Port Arthur, Galveston and Texas. They offered lodging, food, transportation and months of work, Boston said.

    However, once workers got to Port Arthur, there were no hotel rooms. Instead, they had to sleep outside or in cars. About 160 workers reported wage theft, with a total of $121,681 in pay withheld from workers, according to the Interfaith Worker Justice Center. Of that, only $35,770 has been recovered.


    A message left with Timberwood Carpentry was not immediately returned on Tuesday.

    In another case, Reyna Martinez, a 30-year-old Honduran immigrant, said she got a job from Timberwood cleaning storm-damaged schools in Galveston. For four weeks, she was transported by bus from her Houston home to the island, and worked 15 hours a day repairing roofs, bailing water, and clearing debris from school property.

    She was promised $11 an hour, but after the first week, the owner reneged on paying workers. Martinez said many of her co-workers, who came from other parts of the country, had no place to live and no meals, even though the employer had promised to provide both.


    Martinez also had an allergic reaction to the mold and bacteria rampant in the damaged school. The workers were provided with gloves and masks, but no protective clothing. Her employer refused to pay for medical treatment, she said.

    Martinez eventually got most of her pay, although the contractor still owes her about $170 for a day's work. Most of her co-workers, however, had to leave without a penny.


    "That's lost money. I have no hope of ever seeing it again," said Martinez, who now works cleaning house.

    http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/tx/6143389.html
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  2. #2
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    After any natural disaster there is severe unfluxes of people to "help," to put it mildly. After Hurricane Andrew that smacked Homestead, FL, scavengers arrived, and cheated homeowners out of millions, selling their skills and demanding downpayments on making repairs, and then disappeared into the woods without doing any work. The majority of these guys were not licensed to do any sort of work anywhere in the US, much less Florida.
    While, county by county, laws have changed in FL, there is also the problem of education of the people that need a roof repair, etc. There is no redress when an unlicensed company or worker scams you out of money.
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    Well Mr Obama is this putting Americans back to work? Why are illegal aliens doing these jobs? Looks like more of the same. I have said any jobs from the proposed stimulus will go to illegal aliens and not unemployed Americans which is what Obama has planned all along. Some things never change as this so called government's lack of care, compassion and concern for the struggling American people.
    There is no freedom without the law. Remember our veterans whose sacrifices allow us to live in freedom.

  4. #4
    Senior Member miguelina's Avatar
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    "These workers helped clean up the city, and helped it get back on its feet. For two or three weeks, they waded through contaminated water, or through flooded buildings, then they were abandoned," said Francisco Arguelles, the center's training coordinator.
    Oh cry me a river! Thousands of Americans VOLUNTEER their time to do the same thing and aren't whining about getting paid. Where are those stories?

    Here in America we HELP our fellow Americans, we're not supposed to profit from their misfortune.

    These "workers" disgust me with their constant whining and demands!
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    "

  5. #5
    Senior Member azwreath's Avatar
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    Strange We always seem to hear these groups rushing to the aid of illegal immigrants who are allegedly ripped off by unscrupulous Americans.

    Where is their outrage over American citizens being victimized by unscrupulous illegal aliens?
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  6. #6
    Senior Member Hylander_1314's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by azwreath
    Strange We always seem to hear these groups rushing to the aid of illegal immigrants who are allegedly ripped off by unscrupulous Americans.

    Where is their outrage over American citizens being victimized by unscrupulous illegal aliens?
    Trouble is az, is there are a lot of unscrupulous American business' out there. And with the economic situation as it is, this kind of sleazy practice will increase. What happens is a company puts in a bid to work for so much money, and it always goes to the lowest bidder, or the one with close personal ties, and they in turn hire the illegals so they can maximize profits. Then they really maximize them, by skipping out on paying the hired help. It's an old ploy. But the ones that really get under my skin are the ones who hire the illegals, and instead of paying them, they turn them into Immigration for deportation, so they keep every dime, and treat the illegals like slaves. This should be dealt with as a Constitutional Ammendment breach by these employers as it is counter to the 13th Ammendment, as slavery is illegal in the United States of America. That's the main thing that really gets under my skin about the illegal invasion, as the repercussions are far reaching as it not only breaks the law, but it undermines the course of business, and livelyhood of every American Citizen.

    Now if the law was followed, this kind of underhanded crap wouldn't happen in the first place.

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