Mexican workers can seek money for WWII labor BY SOPHIA TAREEN The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Ramon Ibarra remembers his backbreaking days repairing railroads in the Southwest, a contract job for which he left Mexico in 1942 as part of a guest worker program. More than 60 years later, he’s looking forward to the rest of his paycheck. Now 86, Ibarra was one of the hundreds of thousands of Mexican laborers, or braceros, who helped the U.S. meet its labor demands during World War II. A judge recently decided they can now apply for money that was withheld from their paychecks in the 1940s and sent to the Mexican government as an incentive for them to return home. Many of them never saw the money again. Ibarra, of Chicago, and others like him are entitled to approximately $3,500 each after the preliminary approval of a multimillion-dollar lawsuit settlement in San Francisco last week. SETTLEMENT TERMS The terms of the settlement, which does not admit fault, call for the Mexican government to pay braceros or their descendants a total of about $14.5 million. In addition, U.S. lawyers will receive about $2.8 million. But the total payout could change if more braceros step forward before the Dec. 23 deadline to fi le a claim. The deal is subject to fi nal approval in February. Chicago attorney Matthew Piers filed the lawsuit against the Mexican government and three Mexican banks seeking class-action status on behalf of several former braceros, mostly in California, who claim they were unfairly denied wages between 1942 and 1946. “These are the founding fathers of the Mexican community in the U.S. They were treated abysmally,” Piers said Wednesday. “We are very hopeful that finally the braceros are going to get their compensation in the United States.” Starting next week, former workers based in the U.S., or a surviving family member, can file a claim at the Mexican Embassy in Washington or Mexican consulate offices. Former laborers must present original paperwork and identification to be eligible. They also must be living in the U.S., but they do not have to be citizens. Messages left Wednesday seeking comment from defense attorneys and the Mexican Embassy were not returned. An estimated 2.5 million braceros worked in the U.S. between 1942 and 1964, largely in agriculture. The first group of workers had about 10 percent of their paychecks withheld and sent to the Mexican government. It is unknown how many former braceros will step forward to apply for the lost money, Piers said. Potentially thousands are still alive, he said. Locating them might be difficult, a challenge addressed in the terms of the settlement. Advocacy and marketing groups in Illinois, Texas and California have reached out to communities with Spanish-language ads, a tollfree hot line and a Web site. The U.S. Hispanic Consumer Market, along with other Latino community groups, is focusing on the Chicago area, Houston, San Francisco and San Jose, Calif. “There are thousands of stories like this,” Piers said. In 2005, the Mexican congress approved a $26.5 million fund to fi - nally pay the braceros their money. But the government required braceros or the families of deceased workers to file their claims at offices in Mexican state capitals or Mexico City. Many of the braceros who have been living in the United States for decades took buses to Mexico to make their claims, but thousands were unable to make the trip. Even those living in remote regions in Mexico have struggled to claim their payments. Applications for the U.S. settlement will go into the claims process immediately.
Is this a glimpse into the future of what our illegal immigrants, will be seeking?
When the INSANE are running the ASYLUM In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule. -- Friedrich Nietzsche
“How fortunate for those in power that people never think.” Adolph Hitler
Are you two guys confused ? did you read the article ? It is about lazy- a$$ Americans using any labor ( but usually cheap ) if not free- and then figureing out a way not to pay-
There was nothing 'illegal' about them being in this country - nothing. They were invited, and they were put to work. It is hard not to note that, while the braceros might collect upwards of $3.500 each, the lawyers will split $2,800,000. Shouldn't they also, in the name of fairness, get $3,500 each? All two of them? (okay - maybe three...)
Are you two guys confused ? did you read the article ? It is about lazy- a$$ Americans using any labor ( but usually cheap ) if not free- and then figureing out a way not to pay-
What are you talking about ?
That would be called something like----National Health Care.......
As for the lawyers making 2.8mil----that would be our legislators........
...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......
The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.
STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS