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mahatmakanejeeves

(60,944 posts)
Sat Mar 4, 2023, 06:48 AM Mar 2023

A cleaning company illegally employed a 13-year-old. Her family is paying the price.

IMMIGRATION

A cleaning company illegally employed a 13-year-old. Her family is paying the price.

One of 27 minors hired to clean a Nebraska slaughterhouse, the middle-schooler and her family now fear deportation and more.

By Maria Sacchetti and Lauren Kaori Gurley
March 3, 2023 at 1:58 p.m. EST

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. —

At 13, she was too young to be cleaning a meatpacking plant in the heart of Nebraska cattle country, working the graveyard shift amid the brisket saws and the bone cutters. The cleaning company broke the law when it hired her and more than two dozen other teenagers in this gritty industrial town, federal officials said. ... Since the U.S. Department of Labor raided the plant in October, Packers Sanitation Services, a contractor hired to clean the facility, has been fined for violating child labor laws. The girl, meanwhile, has watched her whole life unravel.

First, she lost the job that burned and blistered her skin but paid her $19 an hour. Then a county judge sent her stepfather to jail for driving her to work each night, a violation of state child labor laws. Her mother also faces jail time for securing the fake papers that got the child the job in the first place. And her parents are terrified of being sent back to Guatemala, the country they left several years ago in search of a better life.

“I have no words,” the mother said last month, sobbing in the doorway of their pale-peach house hours after police had led her husband away in handcuffs. The girl, now 14, hugged her mother and struggled to describe how she felt. ... “Bad,” she said, finally.

A sweeping investigation of Packers found 102 teens, ages 13 to 17, scouring slaughterhouses in eight states, part of a growing wave of child workers illegally hired to fill jobs in some of the nation’s most dangerous industries. Driven in part by persistent labor shortages and record numbers of unaccompanied migrant minors arriving from Central America, child labor violations have nearly quadrupled since 2015, according to Labor Department data, spiking in hazardous jobs that American citizens typically shun. ... Homeland Security Investigations has opened a criminal investigation into possible human trafficking related to the Department of Labor’s civil probe, a spokesperson said, and the Biden administration this week pledged a broader crackdown. But the fallout in Grand Island illustrates the painful complexity of enforcing the nation’s child labor laws.

{snip}



JBS billboards across the street from its Grand Island facility on Feb. 25. (Madeline Cass for The Washington Post)

{snip}

Gift Article
https://wapo.st/3ISqgYH

By Maria Sacchetti
Maria Sacchetti covers immigration for the Washington Post, including U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the court system. She previously reported for the Boston Globe, where her work led to the release of several immigrants from jail. She lived for several years in Latin America and is fluent in Spanish. Twitter https://twitter.com/mariasacchetti

By Lauren Kaori Gurley
Lauren Kaori Gurley is the labor reporter for The Washington Post. She previously covered labor and tech for Vice's Motherboard. Twitter https://twitter.com/laurenkgurley
9 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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A cleaning company illegally employed a 13-year-old. Her family is paying the price. (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Mar 2023 OP
Why didn't one of the parents work there instead? jimfields33 Mar 2023 #1
How do you know they didn't work? secondwind Mar 2023 #2
They are co conspirators, not victims MichMan Mar 2023 #3
I'd consider that the parents' motivation may have been desperation. Needing everyone in the MLAA Mar 2023 #5
Could be, but that doesn't excuse it MichMan Mar 2023 #6
Kid, as a victim of crime, may be eligible for citizenship. As per the story about 3Hotdogs Mar 2023 #4
No surprise there. JBS is a Brazilian outfit infamous for its corruption at home. peppertree Mar 2023 #7
Why did her parents do this? XanaDUer2 Mar 2023 #8
What you said: "they're poor." NT mahatmakanejeeves Mar 2023 #9

jimfields33

(18,870 posts)
1. Why didn't one of the parents work there instead?
Sat Mar 4, 2023, 07:07 AM
Mar 2023

They made fake papers and drove her to work. Seems like child abuse really. Glad the parents are being held accountable.

MichMan

(13,172 posts)
3. They are co conspirators, not victims
Sat Mar 4, 2023, 07:59 AM
Mar 2023

Without their participation, none of this would have happened.

Even if they were also working, that changes nothing regarding their criminal actions towards their daughter.

MLAA

(18,599 posts)
5. I'd consider that the parents' motivation may have been desperation. Needing everyone in the
Sat Mar 4, 2023, 09:33 AM
Mar 2023

household to work to make ends meet.

MichMan

(13,172 posts)
6. Could be, but that doesn't excuse it
Sat Mar 4, 2023, 09:35 AM
Mar 2023

Is putting your child in danger as child labor OK as long as you are poor?

What if their daughter went to work as a sex slave? Would that also be OK because they need the money?

3Hotdogs

(13,394 posts)
4. Kid, as a victim of crime, may be eligible for citizenship. As per the story about
Sat Mar 4, 2023, 08:08 AM
Mar 2023

the migrants that DeSantis sent to Nantucket

peppertree

(22,850 posts)
7. No surprise there. JBS is a Brazilian outfit infamous for its corruption at home.
Sat Mar 4, 2023, 05:43 PM
Mar 2023

Its CEO is currently in jail, I believe.

In Brazil, moreover, hiring impoverished 13 year-olds to do hazardous jobs is practically done as a matter of course.

This may all start improving now that Lula's back in office (it did substantially during his previous administration) - but it'll take decades to become a rarity.

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