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Originally Posted by stereoman
Originally Posted by Reality Bytes
I was quoting from the other article . . .

I had to scratch my head over those numbers a bit. First of all, I wondered, $100 per what? Well, I guess it must be per week, eh? Sure ain't a day! Nor a month, one must hope.
So an extra penny a pound equals an extra franklin a week. That means to earn an extra c-note, they must pick ten thousand pounds of tomatoes each week.

Ten thousand pounds. That works out to, hmm. A six day week, 1,667 pounds day. 180 pounds per hour, 9 hours a day. 3 pounds per minute. Every minute.

Wow.

Now, the second thing that caught my eye. If a one cent per pound increase yields a $100 a week raise in income, then how much are they getting per week at 1.5 cents per pound?

Yeah, me too. I'm not sure though - if it's per week, that would be in keeping with needing an extra $100 (per week) just to get TO minimum wage. But 3#/minute is not that much - I've seen pickers work, if you're talking instantaneous rate, that's pretty slow; as an average... maybe.

On the other hand, the other article said
Quote
Florida workers earn about 45 cents for filling a 32-pound bucket. That can mean upward of $11 an hour for those who hustle to fill more than 200 buckets a day. But work is not guaranteed, and tomato pickers get neither health insurance nor overtime.

OK, so at this rate (which is probably the upper end, in ideal conditions), that would be 12# per minute, or 733#/hr, or 5800#/day - so that extra penny would be $58/day? Hmm.

I think the real numbers are somewhere in between... but in any event, for someone making $150/week or even $450/week, damn straight that $100 per week would help them out of poverty! Just another case of economic class disconnect...

Quote
Now recall the comment of the Burger King executive, who probably makes $100 an hour. Or more.
Originally Posted by Burger King Executive
that won't help them out of poverty

Them.

Indeed.

The CEO made 3.09 million last year. I wonder how many tomatoes that is per minute??


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"Those who will risk nothing, risk everything"
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Originally Posted by LeoGer
Many slicing tomatoes are about a pound each, so picking 3 a minute seems an easy task.
Your garden variety Beefsteaks sometimes reach that size, but 6-8 oz. is more common. Tell me, Leo, how many pounds would you pick before you got tired of dragging your gunny sack along and went over to the foreman to trade full for empty? How much of your time would you be using up, time that you would otherwise be using to pick tomatoes? How much time to weigh the bag? To get a receipt for the weight? How many extra tomatoes do you have to pick to get that fifteen minute break twice a day? How many to get a drink of water? Adjust your hat?

I tell you what, one day of my life I worked with an organic farmer to get a taste - what turned out to be my fill - of small scale agriculture. I picked peppers for four hours. If you think picking 1,667 pounds of tomatoes a day seems an easy task, I highly recommend the experience.


Steve
Give us the wisdom to teach our children to love,
to respect and be kind to one another,
so that we may grow with peace in mind.

(Native American prayer)

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Originally Posted by Schlack
the economic value to US employers is rarely, if ever, talked about.

Actually it is talked about. And, unfortunately, it happens that the value of these workers for US employers increases as they remain undocumented and become subject to abuse.

I completely support coming up with some program that will deal with all of these issues in an explicit and legal manner. It is not the workers that I oppose, but their illegal status and the employers who use the situation for their own profit.

Originally Posted by Schlack
I cannot even begin to describe the richness immigrants have brought to my country, we were an isolated backwater in Europe, but joining the EU and our recent immigration rush has broadened our cultural base.
Generally I agree. However Ireland has not yet had a sufficient flood of immigration that it is overwhelming the traditional local culture.

A truly charming aspect of Europe is all the many distinct cultures and micro cultures. At some point, immigration can reach a level where the distinctive local culture is eroded. Where that happens in Europe, you will find local residents objecting.

One reason that Japan has been so adamant in refusing immigrant workers is because they want to protect their culture. And, yes, this is causing a problem for them in that there are insufficient care givers for the aging population.

Originally Posted by Schlack
yet the discussion jumps right into penalties.

With all respect, Schlack, I think the title of this thread may have something to do with that.

Ardy


"It's not a lie if you believe it." -- George Costanza
The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves. --Bertrand Russel
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Originally Posted by Phil Hoskins
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Maybe it's just my skewered perspective spinning an otherwise innocuous assertion, but isn't that kind of like saying there aren't enough American citizens and documented workers willing to do the job at the pay rate being offered, so they "have to" hire more undocumented workers because they are willing?

I think that is what I said.

The words, yes, but that doesn't bear out any kind of economic hardship, which is also what you seemed to argue (albeit you admitted no direct knowledge).

In this narrow case of picking fruit, it seems that DOUBLING the illegal wage would result in an economic increase, at the dinner table, of only 2 cents or so, per pound... not much of a hardship, is it? And I would think that doubling existing wages, whether it's $3 or $11 per hour, is likely going to attract *legal* workers, and so reduce if not eliminate the need for illegal hiring, especially at sub-minimum wage rates.

Would you agree with that conclusion as well?


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First, reality, it isn't my argument. Second, aren't you failing to include the profit motive? It isn't the consumer's "hardship" that is being considered but rather that of the primarily corporate farming enterprises that is at risk if I understand the argument put forth.


Life is a banquet -- and most poor suckers are starving to death -- Auntie Mame
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offtopic
but it is related to the 'appropriate penalties' idea...
Staff fired over prank-call shock treatments

It seems like to me anyway, that you get fired for being late too many times or for being rude to a customer. Getting fired for this kind of activity seems inappropriately mild, but then - I'm a bit of a stickler.

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Speaking of appropriate penalties - It looks to me as though we've failed to come up with workable penalties for illegal immigrants...

Maybe we could move ourselves over to a parallel track --

Anybody want to take a crack at workable penalties for employers of illegal immigrants?


Julia
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Mellow, I'm not sure that I've got anything productive to say about penalties. I think the laws are wrong, therefore the penalties are moot.

EmmaG


"I believe very deeply that compassion is the route not only for the evolution of the full human being, but for the very survival of the human race." —The Dalai Lama
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Leaving Arizona
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Illegal immigrants in Arizona, frustrated with a flagging economy and tough new legislation cracking down on their employers, are returning to their home countries or trying their luck in other states.


Good News, Folks! Employer sanctions can work!

Read the article, it's like a CHRISTMAS MIRACLE!!!!!

I mean that in the GEE-ZUSS way - not the HEY-ZEUS way.

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Ah, market forces at work, eh?

No, wait, this is simply "making it a poor business decision to employ an undocumented worker". Someone said that on one of the immigration threads. I think it's a very good turn of phrase, and seems ultimately as reasonable as any anti-immigration strategy could be.

I see this approach as the commonest of common ground we have between the "amnesties" and the "Minutemen". We have to look at how it affects all the parties involved, including employers as well as the overall population of Hispanic Americans. I hear the Party On the Left extolling the need for a pathway to citizenship as an essential partner to punishing illegal employers. Now we have the latter on a large scale, in one of the most heavily impacted States in the Union.

What do y'all think is going to happen? Long term, I mean. Should we expect to see some new, more robust method of obtaining citizenship (i.e., hefty fine plus civics and ESL)? How do other "solidarity" type folks view this?


Steve
Give us the wisdom to teach our children to love,
to respect and be kind to one another,
so that we may grow with peace in mind.

(Native American prayer)

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