Advertisement

Deadline Results in Firing of Some Immigrant Workers

Share
Times Staff Writer

There were scattered reports Tuesday of employees being fired in Southern California, as well as continuing confusion among workers and employers, as the employer sanctions provision of the new immigration law went into effect nationwide.

Response to the deadline varied from large to small businesses, from industries heavily dependent upon foreign workers to those with few foreign employees. One trade association in Orange County, the Assn. of Merchants and Manufacturers, recommended firing employees without the full complement of papers, while the statewide association stopped short of such a recommendation.

Some small and medium-sized businesses said they had begun laying off employees or issuing deadlines for the delivery of the necessary documents. Some large employers, such as the Hilton Hotels Corp., said they had already enacted long-term employee education programs that demanded documents in advance and, therefore, did not need to dismiss anyone.

Advertisement

Some Don’t Qualify

A top immigration official in San Diego said he knew of no cases in which an undocumented foreigner had been fired.

Some of those fired are immigrants who do not qualify for amnesty, and are therefore ineligible for work permits because they arrived in the United States after Jan. 1, 1982. Others qualify for amnesty but have not yet received the necessary documents from the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service.

Sept. 1 was the deadline under which all aliens hired after Nov. 6 of last year must have submitted proof of work authorization papers given to them by INS. The employer sanctions portion of the law technically went into effect July 1. However, INS said it would not begin a major enforcement effort until Sept. 1.

“I probably have 14 people who have been fired as of today,” said Garth Ward, president of Fashion Sportswear Inc., a South El Monte firm that manufactures girls’ clothing. “These are people who probably are eligible for amnesty but haven’t received their receipts yet,” he said, adding that he will rehire them if they bring in the proper documentation soon.

Garth said he had also lost several other long-term employees, people who had worked for him since before last Nov. 6. Employees hired before Nov. 6, 1986, are grandfathered into the new law. Employers can legally maintain them on their payrolls without documentation.

“We’ve had reports of a whole bunch of people scheduled to be terminated that we’re trying to check out,” said Cesar Reyes, field organizer for the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America in Los Angeles.

Advertisement

“We haven’t had any complaints that I’m aware of,” said Allen Wuhrman, the INS’s assistant district director for investigations in San Diego.

2 Employers Citied

However, Wuhrman said immigration officials in San Diego had reached one milestone Tuesday: Authorities cited two area employers for violations of the so-called employer sanction provisions of the new immigration law, which forbid the hiring of undocumented workers. He declined to name the employers or specify the violations.

In effect, the citations serve as warnings that employers hiring undocumented workers are subject to civil and criminal penalties. After being issued citations, Wuhrman explained, employers who continue to hire undocumented foreigners will be subject to fines--and flagrant violators could face jail terms.

Jay Fong, an attorney with the Asian Pacific Legal Foundation said there are many immigrants who, because of paper work backups at legal offices that are processing amnesty files, may lose their jobs.

“The worst result is that people who are getting laid off or fired will then find it hard to get amnesty because under the law they look like they could become public charges, which disqualifies them for amnesty,” he said.

Government officials recommended that employers use discretion.

Dismissal Advised

“When it comes to someone hired after Nov. 6 who has no standing in this country and has not applied for amnesty, we highly recommend that an employer dismiss that person,” said William Carroll, acting deputy district director of INS in Los Angeles. But, he added, the INS is not going to make a point of going after employees who have applied for amnesty but do not have papers.

Advertisement

John M. Hermann, president of Total Employee Relations Services Inc., a Costa Mesa-based labor consulting business, said he was advising employers that they had little choice but to dismiss workers lacking documentation.

Estimating that several thousand workers could still lose jobs in Orange County, Hermann called Tuesday the “saddest day” in his 15 years of consulting. “A lot of families are going to be hurt,” he said.

In Irvine, labor contractor Arturo Espinoza said he told 50 of his workers last Friday that he could no longer represent them because they did not have proper papers and would not qualify for the amnesty program.

“It hurts, he said. “These are good men who work hard. Most have gone back to Mexico, but some are trying to find work in Fresno or Modesto. But the law is closing in up there too.”

Because of the new laws, Espinoza said, he himself has decided to retire this month after 25 years as a labor contractor.

Stan Kyker, executive vice president of the California Restaurant Assn., said he had gotten countless calls from restaurant owners who feel “caught in the middle” between a desire to comply with the law and a loathing to fire good workers.

Advertisement

Staff writers Patrick McDonnell, Stephen Braun, Steven Churm and Henry Weinstein contributed to this story.

Advertisement