The White House, Washington, D.C. - President Bush said his nominee for Secretary of Agriculture is "a faithful friend to America's farmers."
Nebraska Governor Mike Johanns grew up
on an Iowa dairy farm and is considered an expert on agricultural
issues.
Johanns thanked Bush for the opportunity and said he looks forward to
"advancing your rural agenda for the 21st century."
The nomination reflects the administration's desire to focus heavily
on farm trade over the next four years.
If confirmed by the Senate, Johanns would succeed Ann Veneman, who
recently announced her resignation despite saying earlier that she
wanted to stay.
She's one of seven Bush Cabinet members to announce they won't be part
of the second term.
Editor’s note: At the last U.S.-Mexico
Binational Meeting on November 9, Secretary of State Colin Powell
dashed hopes for an integral immigration reform in the near future.
Delivering the line of the Bush administration, he made it clear that
the negotiations would only include the Bush guest worker proposal,
with no immediate prospect for regularization of the millions of
Mexicans living in the United States. Mexican Foreign Minister
Luis Derbez replied that Mexico “would take whatever’s on the
table.” The following article explains why a return to a bracero-like
guest worker program fits in with the corporate agenda for cheap labor
-- but completely fails to resolve the problem of immigration and
immigrant rights. In 1947, after reading a newspaper article about
the crash of a plane carrying a group of Mexican contract workers back
to the border, Woody Guthrie wrote a poem, later set to music by
Martin Hoffman. In haunting lyrics he describes how it caught fire as
it flew low over Los Gatos Canyon, near Coalinga at the edge of
California’s San Joaquin Valley. Observers below saw people and
belongings flung out of the aircraft before it hit the ground, falling
like leaves, Guthrie says. While the Coalinga Record carried the names of the
pilot and Border Patrol agent on the flight, no record was kept of the
workers’ identity. They were all listed on the death certificates
simply as “deportee.” That became the name of the song. Today, the word illegal is used to mean a person
without immigration papers. But Guthrie uses it in the sense of an
earlier era -- of being excluded. To him, it means someone who is not
a real resident of the place where he works, not part of a community,
or accepted by the society around him. For 22 years, an army of transient workers like
these harvested America’s crops, and for two years, laid its
railroad tracks as well. At the time, being illegal and being a
bracero, or contract worker, was practically interchangeable. The
growers who sent these dozens to their death in a fireball were taking
advantage of this fact. Workers caught without papers were often given
the opportunity to be deported, and flown back to Mexicali, on the
border. There they would be hired again, this time under contract.
Some growers even dropped a dime on their own undocumented workers,
bringing them back again as braceros, a process called “drying out
wetbacks.” Last February George Bush finally introduced his
long-awaited plan for immigration reform. For three years, the
administration raised expectations with compassionate-sounding,
pro-immigrant rhetoric. But when the package finally arrived, it
sounded depressingly familiar. It was, in fact, remarkably like the
program recalled in Guthrie’s song. It must have given a bizarre
sense of deja vu to those few who remember the old practice of
recycling deportees, to see even this return as a provision of
Bush’s new reforms. The official bracero program, negotiated in 1942
between the U.S. and Mexican governments, was ended in 1964. Ernesto
Galarza, a labor organizer, former diplomat and early hero of the
Chicano movement, was its greatest opponent in Washington. But Cesar
Chavez was also an early voice calling for abolition. Chavez later
said he could never have organized the United Farm Workers until
growers could no longer hire braceros during strikes. In fact, the
great 5-year grape strike in which the UFW was born began the year
after the bracero program ended. According to the UFW’s Mark
Grossman, “Chavez believed agribusiness’ chief farm labor strategy
for decades was maintaining a surplus labor supply to keep wages and
benefits depressed, and fight unionization.” Guest worker programs in the United States never
really ended, though. New laws created new visa categories, and
among them are four that permit employers to bring workers in for
temporary labor. Some cover agricultural laborers and some cover
skilled workers in healthcare and high tech. Employers complain about
restrictions on all of them -- on numbers, and requirements that they
show that U.S. resident workers aren’t available for the jobs they
want to fill. Until George Bush was elected, their complaints
were largely dismissed as self-interested efforts to lower wages. But
at the end of the 1990s, the country’s largest employer associations
formed a low profile, shadowy group to change that. And when the
votes were counted (or not) in Florida, their fortunes began to
change. As a result, Bush’s recent immigration reform proposal has
brought the old bracero experience closer to new life than it’s been
since Galarza killed the program in 1964. The Essential Worker Immigration Coalition was
organized in 1999, while Bill Clinton was still president. Its genesis
is tied to one of the Clinton administration’s most celebrated
immigration enforcement plans, Operation Vanguard. For an entire year
in 1998, the Immigration and Naturalization Service went through the
employment records of every meatpacking plant in the state of
Nebraska. Poring through the documents of 24,310 people employed in 40
factories, they pulled out 4,762 names. These individuals were sent
letters, asking them to come in for a chat with an INS agent down at
the plant. About a thousand actually did that. Of them, 34 people were
found to be in the country illegally and deported. The rest, over 3500
people, left their jobs, whether for immigration reasons or just as
part of normal turnover. The INS declared victory, crowing that they’d
found a new, effective means of enforcing employer sanctions -- that
part of the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act which makes it
illegal for an employer to hire someone without papers, and a crime
for an undocumented worker to hold a job. Nebraska’s
Governor Mike Johanns and the American Meatpacking Institute hit the
roof. They accused the INS of creating production bottlenecks, and
implied they’d been denied a necessary source of labor, if America
wanted to continue eating beef for dinner. And oddly enough, the INS agreed. In fact, one of
Operation Vanguard’s architects, Dallas District Director Mark Reed,
boasted that year that the operation would force employer groups to
support guest worker legislation. “It’s time for a gut check,”
he declared. “We depend on foreign labor ... How can we get
unauthorized [undocumented] workers back into the workforce in a legal
way? If we don’t have illegal immigration anymore, we’ll have the
political support for guest worker.” Operation Vanguard, he
predicted, would “clean up one industry and turn the [jobs] magnet
down a bit, and then go on to another industry, and another, and
another.” There’s no question that many U.S. industries
have become dependent on immigrant labor. The Pew Hispanic Center estimates that, in
2001, undocumented workers comprised 58 percent of the work force
in agriculture, 23.8 percent in private household services, 16.6
percent in business services, 9.1 percent in restaurants, and 6.4
percent in construction. The Migrant Policy Institute reports that in
1990 11.6 million immigrants made up 9% of the U.S. workforce, and
that by 2002, their numbers had grown to 20.3 million workers, or 14%
of the workforce. Nevertheless, Reed might have been a little ahead
of his time, in thinking Congress was prepared to act quickly. But he
did get industry thinking. In the operation’s wake, Sherry Edwards
of the American Meat Institute said that while guest workers were a
good idea, packers needed more than the old bracero program. “We
need permanent workers, not seasonal laborers,” she said. 1999 was the year the AMI and a group of corporate
trade associations, in industries employing large numbers of immigrant
workers, introduced themselves to Congress for the first time. That November, the Essential Worker Immigration
Coalition began lobbying for a new, greatly expanded guest worker
program. Its rhetoric referred to immigrants as essential
workers, and its proposals treated guest workers as the most essential
of all. Industry faced a huge labor shortage, EWIC
announced, and “part of the solution involves allowing companies to
hire foreign workers to fill the essential worker shortages.”
Quoting Alan Greenspan, EWIC even threatened inflation if those needs
were denied. Meanwhile, the coalition denounced restrictions on
existing guest worker programs as “unnecessarily tedious,
time-consuming, expensive, and many times unsuccessful.” The group quickly grew to include 36 of the
country’s most powerful employer associations, headed by the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce. The National Association of Chain Drug Stores
belongs (think Wal-Mart, which has 2 members on the NACDS board, and
was sanctioned for employing undocumented workers last year.) So do
the American Health Care Association, the American Hotel and Lodging
Association, the National Council of Chain Restaurants, the National
Restaurant Association, and the National Retail Federation -- all
of whose members depend on a workforce almost entirely without
benefits, working at close to minimum wage. The violently anti-union Associated Builders and
Contractors belongs -- in 1992 its members fought a strike by
undocumented immigrant drywall workers throughout Southern California
for an entire year -- along with its more union-friendly cousin, the
Associated General Contractors. The American Meat Institute, of course, was
there from the beginning. The Clinton administration initially held out some
hope for the EWIC program. Henry Cisneros, after leaving his job as HUD
secretary, eventually to head the huge Spanish-language Univision
media conglomerate, promoted a package immigration deal including
guest workers. In an April 2000 meeting in Washington, he proposed
that unions and immigrant rights groups, which were seeking amnesty
for the undocumented, relax their opposition to guest worker programs
in return for it. As those discussions moved forward during the 2000
campaign, farm worker unions and grower organizations agreed to a deal
in which undocumented agricultural laborers would get a partial
amnesty, and growers would get relaxation of some restrictions on the
existing farm guest worker program, H2-A. With George Bush’s election, growers walked out
of those negotiations, convinced they could get a better deal. The
Florida vote count gave EWIC hope as well. Bush fed those expectations, conducting a highly
publicized series of meetings with Mexican President Vicente Fox over
a set of immigration law changes described by then-Mexican Foreign
Secretary Jorge Casta?eda as “the whole enchilada.” This deal
proposed the same tradeoff -- amnesty for a new guest worker program. EWIC was a key player in these talks. An August 1, 2001, letter to Bush congratulated him
on his “historic initiative” with Fox, and laid out a framework
for the deal.” A temporary worker program that emerges from this
debate should be markedly different from the existing and past
models,” it urged. ”Some of the workers who currently come
from Mexico and other countries to work in the U.S. do so with the
intention of returning to their home countries. It is
reasonable, then, to construct a temporary worker framework
that provides a role for such workers whose labor is needed in the
U.S.” Whether Bush could have ever forced the right wing
of the Republican Party to agree to an amnesty -- or even wanted
to -- is a question for historians. After all, President Ronald Reagan signed the last
omnibus reform bill in 1986, which traded amnesty for employer
sanctions. Senators Phil Gramm and Jesse Helms, while
fulminating over the prospect of legalization, seemed curiously
friendly to guest worker proposals, and Helms even went to Mexico to
discuss them. In any event, economic recession and the attacks on
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon changed everything. Immigrants across the board were scapegoated for
terrorism generally. Over 40,000 airport screeners were fired from their
jobs, and refused rehire because they weren’t citizens, as the
federal government took over the baggage lines. Other immigrants were subjected to arbitrary
screening and indefinite detention. In highly publicized raids, dubbed
Operation Tarmac, the INS deported hundreds of fast food and service
workers in airports. In 2003 alone, Social Security sent over
70,000 letters to employers listing over three-quarters of a million
workers whose names and numbers didn’t jibe. Most companies interpreted those letters to mean
that workers lacked immigration papers as well, and fired massive
numbers of people. In this new political climate, EWIC recast its
proposals. Guest worker programs, it said, were
actually a means to track the names and identities of those who
otherwise would sneak across the border. Terrorists thus
could be identified and pursued. “September 11 means we have to
look at all these issues through the lens of national security,”
said John Gay, EWIC co-chair and vice president of the International
Franchise Association. “We live in a pool of migrating people, and
we have to control people coming across the border.” EWIC has always emphasized the economic benefits of
guest worker programs. In 2002, however, it began to mount an
ideological defense as well. EWIC joined forces with the Cato
Institute, the conservative/Libertarian think tank whose ideology
frames much of the Bush administration’s legislative agenda. Asserting that “America’s border policy has
failed to achieve its principal objective: to stem the flow of
undocumented workers into the U.S. labor market,” a Cato Institute
report authored by Daniel T. Griswold called instead for an “open,
integrated labor market.” The key to meeting the demand for low-skilled
workers, Griswold asserted, was legal immigration of a special type. “The experience of the bracero program,” he
alleged, “demonstrates that workers prefer the legal channel.” To
open one up, a temporary work visa, “should be created that would
allow Mexican nationals to remain in the United States to work for a
limited period. The visa could authorize work for a definite
period, perhaps three years, and would be renewable for an additional
limited period.” About 300,000 visas should be issued at first, the
institute suggested. Guest workers with temporary visas would be able to
get into line for eventual permanent visas after a few years of work. It’s a long line -- an applicant today at the
Mexico City embassy, with the lowest preference, has to wait 12-15
years to get a permanent residence visa. Undocumented people already in the United States
would also be allowed to apply to become temporary workers, and
eventually get into the back of the line. This substitute for amnesty would “dry out the
wetbacks,” much as the growers were doing with those who
perished in Los Gatos Canyon. The Cato Institute report was issued on
October 15, 2002, a year and a half before Bush finally made his
proposal. When he did, the two proposals were
identical. The Cato Institute is bankrolled by the Sarah
Scaife, Lambe and Koch Foundations, among other key funders of the
conservative movement. Cato provided an important bridge to part of
the corporate world that had less direct interest in immigration.
In the last decade the institute has waged campaigns against tobacco,
utility and pharmaceutical regulation, for privatization of government
services, and has supported media consolidation. Rupert Murdoch, owner of Fox News, the New
York Post, Harper Collins publishers and Twentieth Century Fox, has
been a board member since 1997. Cato’s ties to the media helped guest worker
proposals achieve greater political legitimacy. The institute’s
assertion that industries like meatpacking and tourism face a
tremendous labor shortage, rather than a corporate unwillingness to
pay higher wages to attract workers, is treated as fact by much of the
media. Likewise, its assertion that the bracero program was a humane
institution has created an easily accepted, invented history. Following the issuance of the Cato report, EWIC
went to the hill to renew its push for guest workers, this time
emphasizing the threat posed by the undocumented to national security.
Saying that “authorities know very little” about the seven million
people without papers in the U.S., it warned that while most just came
to work, “those few who wish to do us harm find it easier to hide
among their great numbers.” No undocumented worker from Mexico or Central
America has ever been connected with terrorism, and those who flew the
planes into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon all came to the
U.S. with visas. Nevertheless, an EWIC letter to senators asked,
“How can the immigration status quo be tolerated?” When President Bush finally issued his reform
proposal in January, it contained no broad-based amnesty for the
millions of undocumented workers currently in the U.S., unlike the
compromise signed by Ronald Reagan in 1986, or the amnesty/guest
worker deal proposed under Clinton. As the Cato report recommended, it
focused entirely on establishing a new temporary worker program. The
proposal was immediately greeted by EWIC and its member industry
associations. The National Restaurant Association warned that
restaurants faced “a worker shortage of 1.5 million jobs” by 2014,
and praised the plan, which it said “would give employers greater
opportunities to fill these jobs, grow their business and help grow
the economy.” R. Bruce Josten, executive vice president of the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce, was ecstatic as well, finding that Bush “makes
an effort to streamline the process by which employers who cannot find
U.S. workers may hire foreign nationals through temporary worker
programs while ensuring that the workers would have appropriate labor
protections.” He too warned of dire labor shortages, and concluded
that “expanded, practical temporary worker programs will help meet
this need.” EWIC and Cato were successful in getting support
from the conservative wing of the Republican Party as well. Tom Delay
announced that “it is vitally important this country have some sort
of guest worker program. It is only fair to those here in the United
States who need the workers and it is doubly fair to the families of
Mexicans that need the work.” Bush’s proposal, however, was not warmly embraced
by immigrants themselves, even those who supposedly would benefit the
most. In a poll conducted by Bendixen and Associates for New
California Media and the James Irvine Foundation, 50% of the
undocumented workers surveyed opposed it once its provisions were
explained, while only 42% supported it. Renee Saucedo, director of San
Francisco’s Day Labor Program, said that the city’s street corner
laborers discussed the proposal extensively, and rejected it almost
unanimously. “They feel that a temporary visa status would make them
as vulnerable to exploitation as the undocumented status most of them
now share,” she explained. The organization of veterans of the bracero
program, with chapters in both the U.S. and Mexico, was even more
critical. “We’re totally opposed to the institution of new guest
worker programs,” explained Ventura Gutierrez, head of the Union Sin
Fronteras. “People who lived through the old program know the abuse
they will cause.” One former bracero, Manuel Herrera, told the
AP’s Juliana Barbassa that “they rented us, got our work, then
sent us back when they had no more use for us.” Thousands of former
braceros are still trying to collect money deducted from their pay
during the 40s and 50s, money that was supposedly held in trust to
ensure they completed their work contracts, but never turned over to
them. Bush’s proposal contains a similar provision. “If we accept,
then our grandsons and great-grandsons will go through what we went
through,” ex-bracero Florentino Lararios told Barbassa. U.S. labor opposition focused on the lack of a real
amnesty. Eliseo Medina, executive vice-president of the Service
Employees International Union, and one of the AFL-CIO’s key policy
makers on immigration, said that “Bush tells immigrants you have no
right to earn citizenship but tells corporations you have the right to
exploit workers, both American and immigrant ... This proposal allows
hard-working, tax-paying immigrants to become a legitimate part of our
economy, but it keeps them from fully participating in our democracy
-- making immigrants a permanent sub-class of our society.” While expanded guest worker programs have been a
key element in Republican immigration reform proposals that predate
Bush’s, one mark of the success of EWIC in influencing the national
debate has been their incorporation into Democratic proposals as well.
In fact, the accepted wisdom on Capitol Hill now holds that no reform
is possible if industry doesn’t get what it wants. Even immigrant
advocacy organizations within the beltway now include EWIC and its
guest worker proposals in their legislative agenda. In 1986, Reagan approved a broad-based amnesty for
over 6 million undocumented immigrants, who were required to show that
they’d been living in the country since 1982. EWIC’s contribution
has been to reframe the residency requirement contained in the 1986
legislation, transforming it into the concept of “earned
legalization.” In other words, it’s no longer sufficient to
have lived in the U.S. for years -- only participation as a “willing
employee” in a new temporary worker program, contracted out to a
“willing employer” (in the terminology of Bush and the Cato
Institute) qualifies someone for eventual legalization. In a January press conference just prior to
Bush’s announcement, representatives of the National Immigration
Forum, the American Immigration Lawyers Association and the National
Council of La Raza outlined a joint proposal for immigration reform,
which included “earned legalization,” border enforcement policies
which don’t jeopardize the lives of those crossing, and more guest
workers. Jean Butterfield, from the AILA, announced that “the
essential worker sector, the service sector, needs these people
[temporary workers] in fields and factories.” NIF director Frank
Sharry described their proposals as “more market-sensitive
immigration,” and declared that “this is what immigrants want.” Those proposals were eventually incorporated into a
bipartisan bill sponsored by Senators Tom Daschle and Chuck Hegel, and
finally into a Democratic immigration reform proposal introduced by
Congressman Luis Gutierrez and Senator Edward Kennedy. The
Gutierrez-Kennedy Bill, nicknamed the SOLVE Act, would not force
currently undocumented workers to become guest workers. Instead it
would allow people who have lived in the U.S. for the past five years,
and worked for two years, to apply for legal status. It would,
however, allow employers to bring in up to 350,000 additional
temporary workers, presumably through a recruitment system similar to
the current one. Temporary worker visas would be renewable, and last
for either 9 months or two years. Workers could bring spouses and
children, and change employers after three months. EWIC must have savored its moment of legislative
triumph -- no matter which side of the aisle proposals come from, the
centerpiece of its agenda was included. In fact, the only
comprehensive immigration reform package now in Congress which
doesn’t include guest workers is that authored by Rep. Sheila
Jackson Lee, and cosponsored by members of the Congressional Black
Caucus. It would allow people to normalize their status based on
residency in the U.S., and would expand the numbers of permanent
residency visas. It contains no temporary worker program. Jackson Lee
scorns the whole idea, particularly the Bush approach, as a “flat
earth program.” EWIC doubtless deserves credit for its lobbying and
legislative skill. It may seem self-evident that migration should be
harnessed to provide labor to corporate employers -- if it does, it is
a mark of the success of employer groups like it. But EWIC is also
riding a new political wave, and its proposals reflect a growing
effort by governments in all the wealthy countries of the global north
to retailor their immigration policies to meet industry needs. On a worldwide scale, according to the Geneva-based
Migrant Rights International, more than 130 million people today live
outside the countries in which they were born. Overwhelmingly, this unprecedented level of
human migration is caused by the factors of expulsion -- millions of
people can no longer survive in their communities of origin because of
war, poverty or economic dislocation. This migratory flow is generally from the
developing countries of the global south to the wealthy nations of the
north. It is also generally a self-initiated migration. In other words, while they may be driven by forces
beyond their control, people also move at their own will and
discretion, trying on the one hand to find economic opportunity and
survival, and on the other to reunite their families and create new
communities in the countries they now call home. Human beings are not just work animals, and the
desire for community is as strong as the need to labor. Yet
increasingly, this migratory stream has become a potential source of
low-wage labor in the eyes of those able to employ it to their
advantage. And while there have been attempts in the past to channel
this flow for its labor power, like the bracero program and its
successors in the U.S., or the guest worker program which brought
Turkish farmers into German factories in the 1960s, the idea of
managing the migratory flow is new. In fact, in Britain, where the
government seeks on the one hand to end the spontaneous migration of
asylum seekers, and then recruit temporary workers for industry, the
approach is called “managed migration.” The British public was electrified a year ago by a
hunger strike undertaken by Abbas Ameni, an Iranian exile given asylum
by British courts. Ameni sewed his lips closed after the Blair
government ordered him deported, despite the court decision, as a
showpiece of its announced plan to end the influx of asylum-seekers.
Ameni eventually forced the government to back down, but the most
startling aspect of the whole affair was that while taking extreme
measures to stop spontaneous migration into Britain, the government
was quietly implementing a plan to bring in other immigrants, but as
temporary contract workers. According to Don Flynn, policy director for the
Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants in London, “the public
policy debate has been completely transformed over the space of the
last five or six years. The government has made it known that
immigration policies in the UK are going to be based on the
recruitment of immigrant workers. They’re talking about identifying
particular labor shortage industries, and then licensing employers to
recruit unskilled or informally skilled workers. On the completion of
their 12 months [workers] will be rounded up and got out the
country.” Flynn says that the industries dependent on
immigrant labor make up 14% of the gross domestic product, and
describes “wages below minimum levels, with substandard working
conditions, no holidays, and expectations that people will work on a
flexible basis at short notice.” Meanwhile, spontaneous migrants,
like asylum seekers, are prohibited from working, and the Blair
government has proposed U.S.-style employer sanctions to ensure they
don’t. “In order to make that managed system operate, the state
has to have sanctions -- ways of inflicting punishment,” Flynn
explains. The same idea of managed migration -- stopping
spontaneous migration, and channeling migrants into temporary worker
programs -- is a growing part of policies of countries throughout the
European Union towards those who come from outside its borders. They
all reflect an increasing effort to include migration within the world
economic order managed by industrial nations. While this is a convenient arrangement for wealthy
nations, it has severe disadvantages for poorer ones. The cost of
maintaining and reproducing this international migrant labor force
falls on countries least able to afford it. And increasingly, the
remittances of migrant workers have become the main source of income
for the communities from which they come. In fact, remittances from
abroad are now the first or second largest source of national income
for countries like Mexico, Guatemala, the Philippines and others. The
system of managed migration simply institutionalizes this arrangement.
Large corporations and industries of wealthy countries get the benefit
of this labor force, and workers themselves pay the cost of
maintaining it. Developing countries do, however, have an
alternative framework for protecting the rights and status of this
migrant population. The UN’s International Convention on the
Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their
Families proposes an alternative framework for dealing with migration. It
supports the right of family reunification, establishes equality of
treatment with citizens of the host country, and prohibits collective
deportation. Both sending and receiving countries are responsible for
protecting migrants, and retain the right to determine who is admitted
to their territories, and who has the right to work. The
Convention recognizes the global scale and permanence of migration,
and starts by protecting the rights of migrants themselves. Predictably, the countries that have ratified it
are the sending countries. Those countries most interested in
guest worker schemes, like the U.S. and Britain, have not. In proposing alternatives to the guest worker
approach to immigration reform, U.S. immigrant groups insist that
solutions considered should include those proposed by immigrants
themselves. “Why don’t they consult immigrants?” asks Mireya
Olvera, of El Oaxaque?o, published in Los Angeles by immigrants from
the Mexican state of Oaxaca. “It’s obvious they don’t want to
listen to us.” At the heart of immigrant-based proposals is the
relaxation of restrictions on granting normal, green card visas, which
allow migrants to live and participate in community life in the U.S.,
but which also allow them to move back and forth freely, to and from
their countries of origin. The Coalition of Guatemalan Immigrants in
the United States, reacting to Bush’s proposal in January, said that
reforms must include “a process through which immigrants can obtain
permanent residence, and eventual citizenship.” The Salvadoran
American National Network called for “reduction of the long waiting
lists that currently exist in the processing of permanent residency
petitions ... over a 12-month period,” and suggested that future
applications for permanent residence be processed within six months,
instead of the current 12-15 years. SANN also pointed out that any
long-term solution would have to include “development and
implementation of new economic and social policies in our home
countries ... thereby reducing migration flows to the United
States.” Immigrant rights groups make the same point. The
National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights says reforms “must
include opportunities for permanent residency and family
reunification, labor protection, access to due process, safety and
community security.” Their argument is one of inclusion. Immigrants
are more than workers. If supplying labor is a primary goal of
immigration policy, then labor protections and the right of people to
community can no longer be guaranteed, since they contradict its
essential purpose. David Bacon is a reporter
and photographer specializing in labor
issues, and a contributor to the IRC's Americas Program, online at www.americaspolicy.org. October
22, 2003 From
the Office of Governor Mike Johanns, News Release: For
more information, Contact:Jon Camp, United Nations Day Committee
Chair, 402-474-1838 Lincoln,
Nebraska - Governor Mike
Johanns today proclaimed October 24, 2003, as United Nations Day in
Nebraska at a proclamation signing ceremony in the
Warner Chamber at the State Capitol in observance of the
founding of the international organization in 1945. The theme for this year's United Nations
Day observation is "Global Communities: Building a
Bridge to Literacy." The proclamation calls attention to the need to
promote literacy throughout the world, especially in underdeveloped
nations in Asia, Africa and Latin America. Over the course of the next
decade, the United Nations (UN) has pledged to focus on increasing
literacy levels among the world's poorest nations in an effort to improve
quality of life and economic conditions for the world's most
oppressed populations. Nebraskans directly benefit from many UN
organizations such as the World Trade Organization (WTO), World
Health Organization (WHO), and United Nations Education, Scientific
and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). These UN organizations and many
others promote worldwide trade and commerce, travel, health and
international cooperation. The United Nations Association-USA
and the Nebraska and Lincoln chapters offer the opportunity to learn
about and connect with the critical issues confronted by the UN. Governor Johanns encourages all Nebraskans to
recognize the good work of the UN and to join with the
organization in promoting efforts to increase literacy worldwide for
the good of all humanity. Los Pinos, Mexico - In the
framework of the program of rapprochement with United States state
governments, President Vicente Fox today met Nebraska Governor Mike
Johanns in the official residence of Los Pinos. The meeting took place in an atmosphere
of cordiality, and the following items were covered: He [Fox] expressed the
importance of the consular matriculation card as a reliable identity
document that allows the Mexican community access to the United States
financial system. He is the first Republican governor to
be reelected in Nebraska. He was elected in 1999, and reelected in
November 2002. 5.
Senators question Nebraska's participation in U.S. trade agreements May
28, 2004 The
Associated Press State & Local Wire By
Kevin O'hanlon, Associated Press Writer Dateline:
Lincoln, Nebraska - Three state senators are questioning Governor Mike
Johanns' authority to bind Nebraska to policies included in
a number of trade agreements being negotiated by the federal
government. Lincoln
Senators DiAnna Schimek and Chris Beutler and Nancy Thompson of
Papillion sent Johanns
a letter Friday questioning the practice. Last
week, Beutler asked for an attorney general's opinion on the subject. The
senators have concerns similar to those that have been expressed by
the governors of Iowa, Missouri, Pennsylvania, Maine and Minnesota
that rules contained in pending trade agreements would override
state laws offering preference to in-state businesses. The
new trade agreements would grant companies from a number of foreign
markets equal access to state government contracts,
the senators said. They
also said such pacts could limit the states' ability to favor local
companies. As
a member of the World Trade Organization's Agreement on Government
Procurement, the United States already has free trade agreements with
the other 27 members. "I
am concerned about the impact these trade agreements will have on the
work we do," Schimek said. "The Legislature, which allows
for open debate and public input, is the best place for determining
what works for Nebraska." Johanns
responded to the letter Friday, saying in a statement that he is
maintaining the same policy that other governors have before him and
that the agreements do not impede the work of the Legislature. "In
no way does the policy Nebraska has long maintained, regarding free
trade, interfere with the Legislature's prerogative in this area, and
the senators expressing concern are aware of that," Johanns said. Neena
Moorjani, a spokeswoman for the U.S. trade office http://www.ustr.gov,
said earlier this month that trading partners could respond by closing
markets to U.S. suppliers if states do not participate. U.S.
trade officials say states are allowed to exclude sensitive local
industries and that only a few big contracts would be opened to
foreign bidding. But
Lori Wallach, director of Global Trade Watch for Public Citizen, the
Washington D.C.-based consumer
group, said under the trade agreement rules, governors and state
lawmakers would "lose
all of their authority to set the terms on what they buy and who they
do business with." On
the Net: United
States Trade Representative: http://www.ustr.gov
Nebraska
Legislature: http://www.unicam.state.ne.us/index.htm http://www.citizenstrade.org/pdf/senatorsquestionnebraska.pdf
===== 6.
Nebraska Governor Proposes Plan for Drought-Stricken Farmers August
27, 2004 Omaha
World-Herald Omaha,
Nebraska http://www.omaha.com/index.php?u_np=0&u_pg=1638&u_sid=1186489 Source:
SERC (State Environmental Resource Center) http://www.serconline.org/Wildlines/Wildlines_vol3/35.html
Some of us are illegal, and some are not wanted,
Our work contract’s out and we have to move on;
Six hundred miles to that Mexican border,
They chase us like outlaws, like rustlers, like thieves.
Bush’s Proposal - the Bracero Program Revisited
The Essential Worker Immigration Coalition
3. Governor Johanns Proclaims
October 24 "United Nations Day" in Nebraska
October 18, 2004
Under the heading of immigration, President Fox Quesada spoke of
redoubling efforts that will enable a legal, safe, and orderly flow of
migrants, respectful of their human and labor rights.
The President of Mexico and Governor Johanns agreed to take steps to
take advantage of the positive sides of migration.
Mexico's leader acknowledged efforts by Governor Johanns to
implement actions that will improve the quality of life of Mexicans
living in Nebraska.
In this regard, he stressed Governor Johanns' determination to
protect the labor rights of Mexican workers in the state of
Nebraska, especially in the meatpacking industry.
Mr. Fox and Governor Johanns agreed on the importance of economic
relations between Mexico and the United States, and between Mexico and
Nebraska.
The [Nebraska] governor acknowledged President Vicente
Fox's leadership in normalizing the trade in meat products from the
United States.
Governor Johanns has a law degree from the University of
Creighton.
Governor Mike Johanns
sought federal help last week to encourage Nebraska farmers to shut
off center pivots and plant wildlife cover instead of corn. Johanns
sent a proposal to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) for a
second Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program in drought-stricken
areas. If approved, the plan would cover up to 100,000 acres in the
North Platte, Platte and Republican River basins. Farmers would be
paid not to grow crops on land that's irrigated with surface water
from those rivers or with groundwater drawn from areas next to those
rivers. The areas selected have been hit hard by the drought. Also,
they are areas where water conservation is critical if the state is to
comply with major water agreements. Under the conservation proposal,
farmers would be paid at levels comparable to rent on irrigated land,
an average of $126 per acre, said U.S. Rep. Tom Osborne. The program
would cost an estimated $158 million over 10 years, with 80 percent
coming from the federal government. Existing conservation programs
should fulfill the 20 percent match, so no additional state dollars
would be needed, Roger Patterson, director of the State Department of
Natural Resources said. Another $10 million would be needed to prepare
land enrolled in the program. The federal government would split that
cost with landowners or other local sources. Since introducing the
program in 1997, the federal government has signed 29 such
conservation agreements with 25 states aimed at various environmental
goals, said Charles Chadwell, program manager for the USDA.
The Berlin Mandate - A ruling negotiated at the first Conference of the Parties (COP 1), which took place in March 1995, concluding that the present commitments under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change are not adequate. Under the Framework Convention, developed countries pledged to take measures aimed at returning their greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by the year 2000. The Berlin Mandate establishes a process that would enable the Parties to take appropriate action for the period beyond 2000, including a strengthening of developed country commitments, through the adoption of a protocol or other legal instruments. - EPA Global Warming Climate Change Glossary http://yosemite.epa.gov/oar/globalwarming.nsf/content/glossary.html#Berlin_mandate