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April 19, 2005
UFW: 'solid bipartisan support' for AgJobs in Senate |
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United Farm Workers President Arturo S. Rodriguez issued the
following statement from the union's Keene, Calif. headquarters
after the U.S. Senate considered the AgJobs measure:
Even though AgJobs fell short of a "supermajority" of 60 votes
in the U.S. Senate, we have shown solid bipartisan support for AgJobs
from a majority of senators. Given the crushing defeat of the competing
guest worker proposal by Senators Chambliss and Kyl (defeated 77-21),
AgJobs is clearly the only viable, bipartisan solution for our nation's
agricultural industry. It places farm workers at the front of the
immigration debate. No genuine immigration reform proposal has gotten
this far. We will be back again to pass AgJobs.
AgJobs is a milestone for growers seeking a legal and stable work
force. It means hope for immigrant farm workers who perform some
of the most important labor in our nation but constantly live with
danger and fear. No worker should have to sacrifice his or her life
to feed, clothe and house a family. Yet that tragedy happens regularly
along the U.S.-Mexico border. More people died crossing the border
in the last 10 years than perished on Sept. 11, 2001.
We once again call on Congress to quickly place AgJobs on President
Bush's desk and we appeal to the President to sign it into law.
Recently, the President said, ''there is a compassionate, humane
way to deal with this issue... family values do not end at the Rio
Grande." AgJobs includes these basic principals. It is hard-earned
legalization, a comprehensive bill negotiated by the United Farm
Workers and the agricultural industry over a four-year period. It
is backed by more than 500 organizations, including business, labor,
religious, Latino and immigrant rights groups. AgJobs means:
- Undocumented farm workers earning the right to permanently stay
in this country by continuing to work in agriculture: 100 days
during the 18 months before enactment to earn temporary legal
status plus another 360 days over three to six years after passage
to earn permanent legal status.
- Guarantee of workers' rights, including decent pay, working
conditions and protections from abuse.
- Encouraging families to stay together and fully participate
in the society they help feed.
If the farm workers and the agricultural industry can put aside
decades of often bitter differences to agree on AgJobs, surely Congress
and the President can do the same in the interest of the nation
as well as the growers and farm workers who help feed it.
- end -
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