[image: FIRM at the Center for Community
Change]<http://org2.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=MPQCFAEtL13Zg8wc1LZxE1fdRI4lACyY>

*Call to Action:
Fight Back against FIRST WORKSITE raids of the Obama Administration*


Yesterday, Immigration and Customs Enforcement raided a factory in
Bellingham, 
Washington<http://org2.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=PbWsXd5O23QJizskGmfOQ78EBfLXpErK>.
We showed up to the polls to vote for Obama. We heard his promises of
change. We have seen the countless reports that Bush-era immigration
enforcement tactics are both financially and humanely costly. *And now, we
are getting more of the same.*

Raids hurt our businesses, our communities, all workers and immigrants.
Raids victimize the very people that helped to bring change to the White
House and elect President Barack Obama.


In this time of economic hardship it is completely unacceptable for the
Obama administration to be executing raids on our workers, businesses and
communities - *IT IS TIME HE HEARS FROM US!*



*CALL the WHITE HOUSE NOW - 202.456.1414 to speak to the President*

OR FAX a letter to: 202.456.2461


*Tell President Barack Obama:*

   - The raid in Washington state is unacceptable, and hurts all of our
   communities.
   - He must stop the raids, and we *must *pass comprehensive immigration
   reform - *NOW*!

We must let the White House know that we *will not* stand for a continuation
of Bush-era policies. Help us fight  for immigrant rights in the new
administration.

------------------

http://www.bellinghamherald.com/590/story/806909.html
Feb, 24, 2009
Federal immigration agents raid Bellingham business *JOHN STARK AND ANNA
WALTERS / THE BELLINGHAM HERALD*
------------------------------

BELLINGHAM - After federal agents raided Yamato Engine Specialists Ltd. and
detained 28 employees Tuesday, Feb. 24, company officials expressed dismay
about how U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers handled the
matter.

"They arrived in force," said Asiff Dhanani, a co-owner of the company at
2020 E. Bakerview Road. "They surrounded the whole perimeter."

Most of the workers detained were taken off in handcuffs, Dhanani said,
except for three women who apparently were processed and released because
they had children in local schools or daycare centers. The 28 made up about
one-third of the engine remanufacturing company's production force.

"Some of these guys have been with us a long time," Dhanani said, adding
that at least two of the workers detained Tuesday had been cleared by an
earlier federal immigration audit that began in 2005 and was competed in
2006.

The arrested workers included 25 men - 22 Mexican nationals, one Salvadoran,
one Guatemalan and one Honduran - and three women, all Mexican nationals,
said ICE spokeswoman Lorie Dankers. She added that some of those arrested
had phony documents, such as Social Security cards.

The 25 men were taken to the Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma, and all
will be entitled to a hearing before an immigration judge to determine if
they have any legal grounds to remain in the U.S., Dankers said.

Shirin Dhanani Makalai, Yamato's administrative manager, said the company
has done its best to comply with immigration law in its hiring practices.
She provided a copy of a 2006 letter to her from ICE, over the signature of
assistant special agent in charge Roy Hoffman, praising the company's
compliance.

The letter says, in part: "Yamato Engine Specialist Ltd. is in full
compliance with the record keeping requirements of the law and is making a
good faith effort to insure (sic) that all new positions are filled by
American citizens and by aliens authorized to work in the United States. You
and Yamato Engine Specialist Ltd. may be proud of the contribution which
your diligence and resolve are making to the success of this program. Your
efforts are a genuine investment in the economic well-being of our nation."

Makalai said ICE removed several workers after the 2005-06 audit, but that
enforcement action was carried out in a less disruptive way. Agents came to
the plant, interviewed workers, and departed with those who were working
illegally.

"They said they would work with us because they didn't want to cause us
undue hardship," Makalai said of the earlier enforcement. "It was very
dignified and humanely done. We just didn't expect this."

Dankers said there was nothing unusual about the Tuesday raid, which was
authorized by search warrant after an investigation that began last spring.

"Individuals can dispute whether they think that is the appropriate tactic
or not, but it is something we are allowed to do under the law," Dankers
said.

Many of those detained admitted they were in the country illegally when
questioned by federal officers Tuesday, Dankers added.

Makalai said the range of wages for Yamato's production workers begins at $9
and can be as high as $25 to $30 for the most skilled. She and Dhanani said
the loss of the workers left them scrambling to fill orders.

"Because these are skilled jobs, there are only limited people that can do
some of these jobs," Dhanani said. "You can't just get someone off the
street and put someone in these positions."

Makalai said Yamato gets the federally required I-9 documentation from every
worker at the time of hiring, but she and other employers have a difficult
time making sure that workers' documents are legitimate.

"They forged them, they bought them, we don't know," Makalai said. "They
(the federal agencies) do not have an information system. ... Then they come
in and ambush you."

But Sharon Rummery, spokeswoman at the regional office of U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services in San Francisco, said employers could check
employees' documents with relative ease by using the federal E-Verify
system. Any employer can enroll in the free system, which then provides a
quick online verification system that, among other things, attempts to match
names with Social Security numbers.

Makalai, Dhanani and other members of the family that launched Yamato are
themselves immigrants who fled persecution in Uganda in the early 1970s.

"We know about paperwork and following the law," Makalai said. "We know
about living in fear. ... It's not something we like to see other people
experience."


-- 
Shaun
773.828.4336
917.755.7409

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