This construction project was on time and on budget. Then came ICE. - F*cking chuds, Dont you see immigrants make America?

Under a broiling Alabama sky a frustrated Robby Robertson, a construction site superintendent, surveys an 84,000 square foot, mostly built recreation center close to the Gulf coast port city of Mobile.
The site is eerily quiet. Last month, the $20 million project was on track for on-time completion by November 1. Now Robertson says he is looking at a three-week delay after about half of his workers - scared by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement raid on a job site in Florida 230 miles (370 kilometers) away - have stayed away.

Immigration raids on building sites - part of an expanding crackdown by Donald Trump on work sites across the country - are causing major disruptions to the construction industry, according to Reuters interviews.
"The threats and the reporting of raids have caused workers to not show up at job sites, just whole crews for fear of a raid," said Jim Tobin, the CEO of the National Association of Home Builders, which has 140,000 members.

While immigration enforcement agents have stepped up their raids on other work sites in recent weeks, detaining farmworkers, restaurant staff, meat packers, and day laborers, the construction industry is especially vulnerable to disruptions in the labor supply, according to Reuters interviews and government data.
Reuters interviewed 14 people in construction - CEOs, trade association officials and site supervisors - who said the raids are causing project delays and cost overruns and exacerbating existent shortages of skilled labor. They said it was too early to quantify the scale of the damage in terms of lost labor and revenues.

Some of the people Reuters spoke to were in Texas and Florida, where there have been several raids. ICE has also been active in California, Illinois, Washington, Louisiana and Massachusetts, construction association officials said.
Of the roughly 11 million people in the U.S. illegally, about 1.4 million work in construction, according to the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank - more than any other industry.

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COST SPIRALS

It is in places like Robertson's construction site that the impact of the raids is most obvious, because of the potential for costs to spiral with lengthening delays.
Robertson says the problems started the day after about 100 workers were detained in an immigration raid in Tallahassee, Florida, on May 29.
Most of his workforce of more than 100 workers are immigrants from Mexico and Central America and nearly all of them stayed away from work for several days. Seven weeks later just over half of those immigrant workers have trickled back, leaving Robertson significantly short-staffed.
The 22-person roofing team is down to 12. The roof, which should have been completed by now, is not finished, exposing parts of the interior to rain at a time of year when thunderstorms are common.
Electrical work, plumbing, finishing off the dry wall and installation of sports equipment are all behind schedule.
Robertson said his company is facing potentially $84,000 in extra costs for the delays, under a "liquidated damages" clause of $4,000 for every day the project runs beyond its November 1 deadline.
"I am a Trump supporter, but I just don't think the raids is the answer," he said.
He said the company and its subcontractors already verify that workers are in the country legally through the government's E-Verify program, a widely used online system which checks employment eligibility.

Industry officials noted that the E-Verify system is not foolproof, because immigrants can produce fake documents.
Robertson said even Hispanic workers who are in the U.S. legally are scared of being detained by ICE, "because of their skin color. They are scared because they look the part."
Tim Harrison, whose company is building the recreation center, said he cannot easily replace construction workers born in Mexico and Central America with native-born Americans, because most do not have the skills.
Finding replacement workers is especially difficult in Alabama, which has a tight job market, he said. The state has only 3.2% unemployment.
"The contractor world is full of Republicans. I'm not anti-ICE. We're supportive of what the president is trying to do. But the reality of it is our industry has to have the Hispanic immigrant-based workers in it," Harrison said.
The company CEOs cited a chronic lack of investment in training native-born Americans in construction skills such as plastering, carpentry, roofing and welding.
The White House and Labor Department pointed to an executive order signed by Trump in April that aims to support more than a million skilled apprenticeships a year, including the skills needed in construction.
"There is no shortage of American minds and hands to grow our labor force, and President Trump's agenda to create jobs for American workers represents this Administration's commitment to capitalizing on that untapped potential while delivering on our mandate to enforce our immigration laws," Abigail Jackson, a White House spokeswoman, said.
The Labor Department in June created the Office of Immigration Policy, aimed at streamlining temporary work visas for foreign workers.


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"I am a Trump supporter, but I just don't think the raids is the answer," he said.
He said the company and its subcontractors already verify that workers are in the country legally through the government's E-Verify program, a widely used online system which checks employment eligibility."
  1. It seems like the E-Verify program is either deeply flawed or there is an organized effort either via the employers / criminal elements to defraud the system in place.
  2. He literately voted for this.
 
E-verify is bullshit. The Biden admin let in millions of people through immigration parole and millions more got to file fraudulent asylum claims. Both of those groups are illegal aliens but can get work permits and therefore pass e-verify. E-verify is not a solution when dems make it so millions of people who are in fact illegal aliens can work legally.

Also, Migration Policy Institute....nonpartisan? And they still say 11 million illegal aliens when Biden let like 6 million in? Fucking hacks. That's insane willful denial of the invasion we were subjected to.
 
E-verify is bullshit. The Biden admin let in millions of people through immigration parole and millions more got to file fraudulent asylum claims. Both of those groups are illegal aliens but can get work permits and therefore pass e-verify. E-verify is not a solution when dems make it so millions of people who are in fact illegal aliens can work legally.
soft amnesty by another name
 
Again, showing me the depths to which every industry and every institution was coopted to serve illegal immigrant needs over mine?

Does NOT make me feel bad for illegal immigrants, or their clients, or their paymasters.

You knew what your were doing, and you thought you'd get away with it forever.

Whining about it is only going to make things worse for you once the last of your cheap slaves are deported, nobody's' gonna come work for a guy who tried to hold on those slaves by their ankles instead of open their wallets a bit more, no matter how much they change their tune about having "always" done their upmost to hire only legal workers.


"I am a Trump supporter, but I just don't think the raids is the answer," he said.
He said the company and its subcontractors already verify that workers are in the country legally through the government's E-Verify program, a widely used online system which checks employment eligibility."
  1. It seems like the E-Verify program is either deeply flawed or there is an organized effort either via the employers / criminal elements to defraud the system in place.
  2. He literately voted for this.
I'm sure it works.... it tells you that, yes, Joe Czogolitz, 85, of Pittsburgh, retired since 1999 is legally clear to work...... but somehow, all the HR staff missed the fact that the guy in front of them doesn't look white, 85, nor like he just arrived in So Cal from Pittsburgh eager to pick beans for 30 years.... There's willful blindness to the fact that the E-verify system apparently doesn't have a way to flag stolen SS# - it just says "yes that's a valid one" or "no that isn't" - like how those fill-in boxes on websites can decode the numbers and tell if the CC info you put in is valid... but can't detect a stolen CC unless the bank has turned it off directly.

They know just how much to look to not break the law, but not so much they have to admit they hired a guy who looks like "Miguel Sanchez" even though the papers he gave said "Mike Smith".

TL : DR - They're gaming the system instead of using it as intended in good faith.
 
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I guarantee random Mexicans were just showing up to the job site and being paid cash for labour.
Probably safer for the illegals and domestic employers as the current trend of ICE raids appear to be generating targeting packages based on SSN fraud. Glenn Valley Foods was said to be part of an overarching federal SSN fraud investigation. They could be possibly cross referencing data from e-verify
 
"I am a Trump supporter, but I just don't think the raids is the answer," he said.
He said the company and its subcontractors already verify that workers are in the country legally through the government's E-Verify program, a widely used online system which checks employment eligibility."
  1. It seems like the E-Verify program is either deeply flawed or there is an organized effort either via the employers / criminal elements to defraud the system in place.
  2. He literately voted for this.

Hiring them after using e-verify is even worse because that means everyone you're hiring is stealing someone's identity.
 
"The threats and the reporting of raids have caused workers to not show up at job sites, just whole crews for fear of a raid," said Jim Tobin, the CEO of the National Association of Home Builders, which has 140,000 members.
Yes, this is the usual purpose of law enforcement, to catch people breaking the law and deter them from thinking of doing it again. You have cracked Trump's code. This guy should be a detective. :shit-eating:
 
It was on budget because you were paying them less than the fair rate, under the table, with no FICO, other payroll taxes, or health insurance paid.

It's a $20 Million project and you can't do the due diligence of a 20 year old McDonalds manager in East Bumfuck, Nebraska and check their fucking IDs and fill out an I-9?

Cry me a fucking river.
 
WTF is #3 category on that list? 946.000 in "Professional, scientific, management, administrative, waste management".

Overstaying visajeets running roach motels and laundering fake compsci degrees?

Also, does this category include every shift supervisor and up from another cats? And IRL jannies?

Statistics truly is a wondrous phenomenon.
 
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