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    WI:Whitewater factory struggles to stay open after worker ra

    Whitewater factory struggles to stay open after worker raid

    Pat Schneider
    July 18, 2007

    WHITEWATER -- Star Packaging is all but silent a year after a raid by federal immigration agents.

    A lone machine clacked on a recent afternoon, a single worker sealing plastic bags around bundles of screws. Beyond him, a flank of packaging assembly lines stood motionless. Empty pallets were stacked to the ceiling, and the reaches of the 58,000-square-foot warehouse, once filled with goods received and ready to deliver, yawned wide.

    The Whitewater plant that once employed 100 workers now has fewer than 10. Its founder, scheduled to go to trial Monday, faces some 30 years in prison if convicted, and Hispanic and Anglo neighbors are still trying to rebuild trust.

    Crystal Petrie, the 26-year-old daughter of Star owner Allen Petrie, struggled to bite back anger and grief while talking about the fate of the business her father started.

    "He's very hurt by what happened," she said. She said her father cooperated with police, providing information on any worker about whom they raised questions.

    About a quarter of Star workers were taken into custody after the raid on Aug. 8, 2006, but that was just the start for the plant workers and owners.

    "We lost accounts because of the negative publicity," Crystal Petrie said while walking through the empty plant on July 12.

    As business dropped off, layoffs followed. Now it's a question how long the business can stay open.

    "It won't be much longer if we can't recover business," said Petrie, who worked at the plant since age 18, skipping college to bet her future on the family business her father founded in the early 1980s.

    She opened the doors of the family factory to a tour organized by Voces de la Frontera, an advocacy group for immigrant and low-wage workers.

    At a forum at city hall that day, immigrants seized in the raid told of their experiences.

    Luz Huitron, a 55-year-old grandmother, said through an interpreter that she was taken to the Dodge County Jail and did not understand what was happening. A diabetic, she was crying and vomiting, but was given no medical treatment, she said. With the assistance of the Mexican consulate, Huitron was released in nine days. Now under an order of deportation, she and a handful of others seized in the raid are trying to win the right to stay in the United States.

    "Each and every one of us works to survive and support a family. People judge us but supporting a family is not a crime," she said, crying. "I cannot remain silent about this," she said.

    Bianca Cruz, age 8, asked at the forum: "Why does the government say it takes care of us, then take my mother away?"

    The girl's mother, Mora Cruz, 28, said later with her daughter's help, "She was really sad. She didn't know where I was."

    Bianca and her younger brother were cared for by an aunt for the nine days Mora Cruz was in custody.

    Christine Neumann-Ortiz, director of Voces de la Frontera, based in Milwaukee, said that, as in the past, immigration foes have pitted working people against each other. But the two groups' interests are closely aligned, she said. "If a country supports the quality of life of its immigrant workers, it will uphold the quality of life of its citizens."

    "We need to change the laws so they fit reality and fit our values," she said. "We need a simple, affordable process to citizenship. Congress can do it, but the political will probably is not there."


    'They broke the law': Those speaking at the forum in Whitewater were sympathetic to immigrant workers, but other sessions have drawn proponents of stepped-up enforcement of immigration laws and deportation of undocumented workers, Neumann-Ortiz said, most notably members of the Washington D.C.-based Federation for American Immigration Reform.

    Ira Mehlman, a spokesman for the federation, said in an interview that the federal government should make more workplace raids and arrest more employers.

    "If they get serious and go after the executive who knowingly hire illegals, it will send out the message that you can't do it and get away with it," Mehlman said.

    Computer systems to quickly and efficiently verify the Social Security numbers presented by workers could easily be developed and would be if not for bureaucratic inertia and the influence of business interests that want cheap labor, he said.

    Departing undocumented workers may hurt the businesses where they worked, but their presence depresses local and national economies, Mehlman argued. "We should not have an economic system that allows illegals to dictate wages -- it'll destroy the middle class."

    Mehlman is unmoved by the plight of parents separated from their children, or business owners who find their life's work threatened when authorities take workers. "Whose fault is that?" he asked. "They broke the law, and there's a consequence to that."


    Civic fallout: City Manager Kevin Brunner estimates that up to 10 percent of his town's 14,000 residents are Hispanic, a group whose population in the area has been growing rapidly in the last decade. Hispanics are employed in all kinds of occupations at all levels and have begun to open their own businesses, he said.

    Brunner said long-time residents and new ones mostly lived well together with a few incidents: the occasional piece of racist graffiti, the nasty letter to the local paper prompted by news of his initiative to have city staff learn Spanish.

    After the raid on Star Packaging, though, the community was polarized. "There were those that felt it was justified and those who said it wasn't," he said.

    He characterized Star as a medium-sized, low-wage employer, and said the loss of its jobs, and possibly the company, was "significant."

    Marilyn Kienbaum runs the city food pantry, which saw a flurry of activity as workers lost their jobs at Star. "I think it could have been handled differently," she said. The Hispanics in Whitewater, she said, "are scared to death. I feel bad for them."

    Tales of their treatment in local jails shocked her, Kienbaum said. "For heaven's sake, this is Wisconsin."

    Police Chief James Coan said attention to the case has focused too much on the immigration issues, and not the identify theft aspects -- the basis of the charges against Petrie.

    Coan said he could not elaborate of details, but alleged that some undocumented Star employees were using the Social Security numbers of legal immigrants. "Many Hispanic people themselves were victimized," he said.

    Petrie's attorney, Stephen Glynn of Milwaukee, did not respond to messages seeking comment for this article. In published articles, however, Glynn has said that Petrie did not intend to violate the law.

    The raid has led to some changes designed to make Hispanics feel more comfortable in Whitewater. Following meetings after the raid with members of the Hispanic community, the city changed its practice of having police officers ask drivers in traffic stops for their Social Security numbers, Coan said. "Our purpose was very benign," he said, merely a way to help collect any unpaid tickets.

    "We asked everyone for it for several years, but we got a strong sense that people in the Hispanic community thought we were trying to capture information we could use for deportation. That was obviously not the case," he said.

    Despite the changed policy, the damage is done, Jorge Islas, founder of Sigma America, an organization dedicated to building community, said in an interview.

    "Whitewater used to be a peaceful town -- everybody working, everybody trusting the police, everybody living together. The raid created fear," he said.

    The publicity after the raid sealed the popular image of undocumented immigrant workers as "criminals" for those inclined to think of them that way, he said.

    At a silent protest outside city hall after the raid, "a lot of Anglos came and said they were sorry this happened, other people said, you're illegal -- go back to your country.'"

    Islas said he worked for Allen Petrie at Star shortly after he came to Whitewater 19 years ago and he had no problems. Hispanics who have worked there recently also said it was a decent place to work, Islas said.

    Since the raid, some Hispanics left the area. Others are out of work and having trouble paying the bills. "The immigration law is broken," Islas said.

    The fissures keep moving through a community long after the raids are over and the headlines forgotten, Crystal Petrie said.

    "People think life goes on -- it doesn't," she said.

    http://www.madison.com/tct/mad/topstories/201787

  2. #2
    Senior Member Cliffdid's Avatar
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    The publicity after the raid sealed the popular image of undocumented immigrant workers as "criminals" for those inclined to think of them that way
    Ah yea if you steal someone else's ID I tend to think of you as a criminal. If you break into my country I tend to think of you as a criminal. For all those who don't I guess they were never taught right from wrong!

  3. #3
    Senior Member Nicole's Avatar
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    We lost accounts because of the negative publicity," Crystal Petrie said while walking through the empty plant on July 12.

    Good if this happened more often and people boycotted these companies that hire illegals, many illegals could not get jobs and would self-deport. Then Americans could work those jobs for a livable wage.


    Bianca Cruz, age 8, asked at the forum: "Why does the government say it takes care of us, then take my mother away?"

    Since when is it the governments job to "take care" of anyone? Especially illegal aliens. Please show me where that is in the Constitution. I will glady pay for one way plane tickets for poor little Bianca and her family back home.

    Tales of their treatment in local jails shocked her, Kienbaum said. "For heaven's sake, this is Wisconsin."

    Where is the shock and outrage of the treatment of our AMERICAN BORDER PATROL AGENTS? They have been denied medicine, beaten, etc. Where are the special interest groups for them? They are in solitary confinement 23 hours a day. The only people fighting for them is the normal congressman, Lou Dobbs, talk radio and people like ALIPACers.

  4. #4
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    We lost accounts because of the negative publicity," Crystal Petrie said


    I hope you lose everything just like a lot of American workers have because of employers like you.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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    Senior Member Nicole's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jimpasz
    We lost accounts because of the negative publicity," Crystal Petrie said


    I hope you lose everything just like a lot of American workers have because of employers like you.
    Hey Jimpasz, your avitar, is that real? Or am I just really gullible?

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    Nicole,

    Have some fun make your sign at http://www.churchsigngenerator.com/

    Jim
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  7. #7
    Senior Member roundabout's Avatar
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    The article says very little about the "screw company" down the street, in the next county or the next state that has to compete with the cheap labor supplied by illegal immigration.

    The halls of Congress should be swept clean! 20 yrs have passed and not a single effort put forth to enforce the laws, let alone the border. Thats right 4 Presidents and nothing done on the illegal immigration problem!

    20 years is along time to sit and ponder. Tell me this day was not forseen! All the implications and situations,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,unforseen? Really?

    "To choose one's victim, to prepare one's plans minutely, to stake an implacable vengeance, and then go to bed.........there is nothing sweeter in the world." Joseph Stalin

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    Senior Member swatchick's Avatar
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    I wish other business would loose everything for hiring illegals. The way many feel in South Florida I am looking at coming up with a webpage for those who don't want to deal with businesses who hire illegals. There is a national page which covers all states but there is not much on Florida. Incidently on that web page Dunkin Donuts is on it for hiring legals.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  9. #9
    Senior Member Nicole's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jimpasz
    Nicole,

    Have some fun make your sign at http://www.churchsigngenerator.com/

    Jim
    I will-thanks!


    Nicole

  10. #10
    Senior Member Darlene's Avatar
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    jimpasz

    Thanks for the link Jim, thats pretty funny.

    especially "Praise ALIPAC"

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