Pete Borden: Will new parking deck mean more jobs for illegals?
by Pete Borden
Columnist
May 12, 2010 12:00 AM | 1049 views | 9 9 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print
My first thought, upon reading that the Cobb Board of Commissioners is moving ahead with plans to build a parking deck downtown, was "I wonder how many illegal aliens will be doing jobs paid for with taxpayer dollars, jobs that rightfully should go to Cobb County's unemployed workers?"

I hope nobody in Cobb really thinks the recent revelation that illegal immigrants are working on the courthouse project put a stop to that practice. Nobody in the construction industry believes it. We know that they just switched names and continued as before.

The bricklayer trade may be law abiding now, but there are numerous other trades that nobody is checking on.

Speaking of that flap, what has happened to the coverage? It was front page news, both in the MDJ and the Atlanta newspaper, for a short time and now it is gone.

Could it be that it went the way of the federal investigation that then-Cobb Commission Chairman Sam Olens said he would ask for? Did he, in fact, ask for it? If so, why was it not done?

The plain fact is that any action, in that respect, is going to be stalled until the courthouse is finished and turned over to the county and it is too late to save any jobs. Then interest in punishing the guilty will wane. The people will look at the new courthouse and say, "Wow, is that beautiful. So what if some of the people who worked there were illegal? They did a nice job, didn't they?"

Meanwhile, your neighbor, Joe Bricklayer, loses his house and his truck because he can't work for "$10 an hour, under the table." That's the going rate for illegal bricklayers on the courthouse project. Where is the IRS?

Now comes the parking deck, and as sure as the sun rises, the same thing will happen there, just like it happened, and probably continues, at the courthouse project.

The ruse is deceptively simple, but complex looking enough to frustrate anyone attempting to conduct an investigation. This is the way it works: General Contractor receives a contract from Owner to perform the work. He puts the job out for sub trade bids and decides that Mason Subcontractor is the low bidder .Masonry Subcontractor immediately hires Labor Sub, who only furnishes labor and some of the equipment.

Labor Sub then hires Lower Paid Labor Sub, who then hires Cheaper Labor Sub. Cheaper Labor Sub hires Cheaper Yet Labor Sub, who, in turn hires Dirt Cheap Labor Sub whose illegal immigrant workers actually perform the work, for $8 to $10 an hour, cash.

When an investigation is launched, Masonry Subcontractor says, "Labor Sub is the one who should E-Verify them." Labor Sub says," Check with Lower Paid Labor Sub. He should be the one to E-Verify." So it goes down to Dirt Cheap Labor Sub, who shrugs his shoulders, says "No comprende," walks away and calls one of the illegal alien lobby groups and complains that the racist government is picking on him.

The next day, the same people show up, with a new foreman and a new company name and the work goes on.

This is what happens, with variations in the number of lower-tier subs, countless times all over Cobb County and the state of Georgia. The people in charge are giving lip service to enforcement of the law, in favor of cheap labor, at the expense of Cobb's workforce.

You may be sure it is happening to some extent on the road and bridge jobs being done with that SPLOST money, the school construction being performed with SPLOST III funds and will happen with the parking deck. It is, of course, even more widespread on jobs not involving public money.

The major problem is that the Owner (State, County, City or private money) does not really care as long as the job gets done cheaply.

The fact that the masonry subcontractor on the courthouse was more than substantially lower than the competition, should have thrown up a red flag. In truth, it did, but nobody saw it, or they didn't care and just ignored it.

Until some teeth are put into the law and lawbreakers are punished to the full extent of that law, and until officials who let it happen get punished, the workers of Cobb County, along with their families, will continue to suffer.

We, in Cobb County, cannot police the entire state, but we can sure do something about our own county, by demanding strict enforcement and seeing that we get it. We owe it to each other and to ourselves.

Pete Borden is a mason in east Cobb.
Comments
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May 13, 2010
Sheriff Warren has deputies Monday-Friday at the courthouse, so why doesn't he just send a couple extra to check the documentation of workers at the new courthouse and then at the parking deck? If he can't do it, then why can't ICE do it? They have raids on chicken processing plants, why not courthouses & parking decks? ICE could also go in mornings to the landscape companies, before their trucks roll out. There are roadblocks to check for DUI and driver's licenses, so why not check for illegals?
anonymous
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May 13, 2010
Bull. Get a job, you drain on society.
Pat H
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May 13, 2010
Indian Joe, you are right on about the Botanical Gardens. Some of those injured are still being treated at Shepherd. Think the contractor is paying the bill through Workmen's Comp? Perhaps an open records requests on all these contractors is in order.
LegalOnly
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May 13, 2010
It's hard to be legal. It means that Joe has to pay taxes on that $10/hour he earns, while Jose, the illegal, doesn't; Jose takes home his entire earnings. Joe's employer doesn't offer healthcare, so he must pay for that out of his remaining $6/hour; Jose's employer doesn't offer healthcare, but, hey, Jose gets free healthcare by walking into Kennestone Hospital's emergency room. (Joe could do the same, but he has too much pride, and will only do so when there is a true emergency.) Joe has to pay for his children's school lunched in full, while Jose usually has his kids' lunches paid for by taxpayer-supported federal lunch programs.

So, who says that illegals aren't a problem to the U.S.? For all you liberals/progressives/Democrats, I have one question: Does this scenario represent a "level-playing field" that you so much espouse? NO!

Why didn't the Cobb Commissioners have someone checking on the legal status of ALL workers on such a well-publicized project??? They let the Cobb taxpayers down again -- no taxpayer/legal resident jobs and no oversight.
mk-
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May 13, 2010
Indian Joe,... will you marry me?
Indian Joe
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May 13, 2010
And wasn't the problem of the falling bridge at the Botanical Gardens traced back to an illegal who could not read English and did not follow the plans? Maybe the entire new courthouse will tumble down,and be filled with the lawyers and politicians who alibi for these illegals. But then, these are just hard working people who want a better life for their ever increasing families - including the 50 to 60% of their wages which are sent back to Mexico. Money paid to them which is never returned to OUR economy. Love it when the major media does the sob stories about how the "poor" people of some Mexican commuities are really suffering now that our economy stinks and relatives here can't send as much back. Poor babies.
mk- lawbreakers!!!!
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May 12, 2010
Exactly 100% correct! You better believe illegals will be building that deck! Gez,... they gotta feed their families,.. their 10 bambinos & their pregnant wives!! Well, maybe not FEED them,... food stamps do that,... but they gotta put gas in their trucks & vehicles!!! It's amazing to me how many people continue to use illegals for everything @ their homes- cleaning, remodeling, painting, landscaping, etc.! Don't know if Americans are just plain stupid,... or what!!
Pat H
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May 12, 2010
Hiring illegals to build the deck was my first thought. The AJC did an article on the substandard brick work on the courthouse, where no grout was applied. We all know that the entire courthouse, not just the brick work, was done by illegals. The contractors hire subs specifically to skirt the law. All contracts awarded should be very specific - if your subcontractors, or their subs, don't use E-Verify for each and every worker, then fines, jail time and no more contracts again ever. Think Tim Lee is up to that challenge? He should be, he holds the power to do it.
Ripped Off Tax Payer
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May 12, 2010
Yes I’m sure it will help illegal aliens with unemployment, if the great Sam Olens had put “Best Bid Practices” in place this wouldn’t happen. The current system of best campaign contribution is just not doing the citizens of Cobb County justice. Once again just follow the Sam Olens money train!!
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