Categorized | General Interest

Day Laborers Fighting Back

Worth reading today in the Metro section of The New York Times (one can reasonably say “buried in the Metro section) is an update on the federal lawsuit by six anonymous day laborers who are arguing that they are being harrassed by the Village of Mamaroneck, NY:

The case accuses village officials of harassing the workers as part of a “deliberate and coordinated” campaign to drive them off the streets, and rests on the workers’ 14th Amendment claim that they are discriminated against because they are Hispanic. At the start of the trial, they dropped their original First Amendment claims — that the village had violated their rights to free speech and free association — out of concern that it would force them to reveal their immigration status. The plaintiffs say they are remaining anonymous because they fear retaliation from the authorities. Their lawyer said some of the workers were here legally, while others are not.

“If we lose, the signal that is being sent is that towns and villages can aggressively enforce ordinances in a way that might make it impossible for the day laborers to find work,” said Cesar A. Perales, president of the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund. “That’s what’s being tested here.”

The rest of the article is here.

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