Cambridge, Maryland
21 June 2007
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Efforts are currently underway to revive stalled immigration legislation in the U.S. Senate and bring it to a vote before the conGREssional recess in early July. In the meantime, businesses that depend on seasonal foreign workers are anxiously following events. Jeff Swicord reports on one small business in Cambridge on Maryland's Eastern Shore.
For three generations the J.M. Clayton Seafood Company has processed crabs from the Chesapeake Bay and sold the sweet meat throughout the United States.
Jack Brooks |
"Without the temporary workers, we close,” says Brooks. “And [if] we close for one year, we close for good. It is the end of what we do."
Years ago, the Brooks family hired seasonal American workers to pick crabmeat from April through November. But as the town of Cambridge on Maryland's Eastern Shore GREw, so did the job opportunities. Most of the American workers have moved on to better paying year-round jobs.
"I would love to employ domestic workers and have the local folks come and work like the old days,” adds Brooks. “But with all the opportunities, they are just not here."
Government documentation is required for the guest worker program |
They must approve the immigration application for workers like Olga Gonzalez. She leaves her four-year-old daughter and aging parents in Mexico and travels to Cambridge to work for five to eight months of the year.
"It is very hard to find work where I live in Mexico and it is for very little money," says Gonzalez.
Consuelo Martinez |
"It is hard because sometimes we get sick, we don't have money to go to the hospital, we need to pay for the house, and we can not find any money over there so we come here," says Martinez.
The Mexican workers are hired under a guest worker program that the U.S. Senate is debating whether to reduce and eventually eliminate. That upsets Jack Brooks who says the so-called H-2B guest worker program is critical for his business to survive.
Immigrant workers |
Expensive condos now line Cambridge's inner harbor where crab picking houses once were. The Brooks family is concerned that the culture of the Chesapeake Bay and their way of life may soon be lost.
The fate of this small business and its Mexican workers is in the hands of lawmakers in Washington.