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  1. #1
    Senior Member zeezil's Avatar
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    100 Nepalese Workers Missing From Alabama Plant

    100 Nepalese Workers Missing From Alabama Plant
    Thursday, January 31, 2008

    HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — About 100 people who came from Nepal to work at a north Alabama factory seemingly vanished from a pair of apartment buildings, along with a lot of furniture and appliances, and can't be located, officials said Tuesday.

    Immigration agents are trying to determine what happened to the Nepalese workers, among hundreds brought to the United States to work at a DVD factory operated by Cinram Inc., said Lauren Bethune, a spokeswoman for the Alabama Department of Homeland Security.

    "We do not in any way consider it a security threat, but we do think it is important," she said.

    A Huntsville television station, WAAY-TV, first reported on the missing workers.

    Cinram's human resources director, Peter Hassler, did not immediately return a telephone call seeking comment. But a spokesman for a company that recruited the workers for Cinram said a contact in Nepal believes many of them have returned home.

    "Most of the people he was talking to said they came to America, did what they wanted to do and went back home," said Doug Wilson, president of Ambassador Personnel in Thomasville, Ga. "These are people with pretty strong family ties."

    Mary and Tim Snopl told the TV station they rented apartments in two buildings last fall to about 240 workers from Nepal. But Mary Snopl said scores of the workers are now missing, along with hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of furniture, televisions and kitchenware.

    "I don't know if they're living in Huntsville or somewhere else, I just know they aren't living with us and they aren't working at Cinram," she said.

    Wilson said his company was seeking a list of items believed to be missing.

    Reports last fall said Cinram had hired about 1,350 foreign workers to package DVDs at its plant in Huntsville. Cinram — which describes itself as the world's largest maker of pre-recorded multimedia products — said it turned to foreign workers because the area job market couldn't fill its needs.

    Bethune said about 100 immigrants were believed to be missing. Agents are trying to determine exactly what type of visas they used to enter the United States.

    "It's possible that they had work visas, they expired, and they went home," she said.

    The workers can earn $8 an hour working 12-hour shifts packing DVDs in boxes. Besides Nepal, Cinram has used foreign workers from Bolivia, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica and Ukraine.
    http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,327109,00.html
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  3. #3
    Senior Member zeezil's Avatar
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    Reports last fall said Cinram had hired about 1,350 foreign workers to package DVDs at its plant in Huntsville. Cinram — which describes itself as the world's largest maker of pre-recorded multimedia products — said it turned to foreign workers because the area job market couldn't fill its needs.
    This is a bold faced lie. This company has NO CREDIBILITY if it is saying they could not find AMERICAN workers to work in its plant. Exactly what recruiting methods did they use? What advertisement of the positions did they make? Just what did they do to seek American workers? And, what was they hourly rate they were paying these Nepalese workers? Were there any benefits included? Were any of these Nepalese workers utilizing public assistance while here (food stamps, welfare, public schools, hospitals for routine medical care)?

    This whole think stinks to high heaven. Why does a manufacturing plant need to bring in hundreds of foreign workers? This is not only fishy but rotten.
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    Mary and Tim Snopl told the TV station they rented apartments in two buildings last fall to about 240 workers from Nepal. But Mary Snopl said scores of the workers are now missing, along with hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of furniture, televisions and kitchenware.


    i feel very sorry for the people of alabama that had to live next to them.
    did anyone look in the dumpsters?
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    Quote Originally Posted by stoptheinvasionoforegon
    Mary and Tim Snopl told the TV station they rented apartments in two buildings last fall to about 240 workers from Nepal. But Mary Snopl said scores of the workers are now missing, along with hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of furniture, televisions and kitchenware.


    i feel very sorry for the people of alabama that had to live next to them.
    did anyone look in the dumpsters?
    maybe in the pawn shops too

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