Houston Chronicle

UT study aims to stop post-Harvey chains of human traffickin­g

- By Brooke A. Lewis

University of Texas at Austin researcher­s are planning to study the human-traffickin­g chains that may have stemmed from constructi­on projects following Hurricane Harvey.

The National Science Foundation awarded to the university a two-year $300,000 grant to interview workers who were part of Harvey recovery efforts and ask about their working conditions and other experience­s since the hurricane hit in 2017.

“We’re going to collect data in the Houston area because it’s an area where we know just in general there’s different forms of human traffickin­g and labor exploitati­on that goes on,” said Matt Kammer-Kerwick of the Bureau of Business Research at UT’s IC2 Institute. “There’s a

risk of it going on at higher levels in this recovery phase we’re in after the hurricane.”

Kammer-Kerwick, the lead researcher, said the atmosphere after a natural disaster can be a breeding ground for chaos, creating a sense of urgency as homes need to be rebuilt quickly. They will look for employees who might have been paid unfairly, worked in unsafe conditions or been coerced into completing dangerous work.

“People would want to know if their homes and local businesses are being rebuilt by workers who are exploited, coerced, or swindled out of their hard-earned wages,” said Noël Busch-Armendariz, director of the Institute on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault and professor of social work at UT Austin, in the news release about the study. “Reducing labor traffickin­g and exploitati­on makes Texas a fairer and better place to work and live.”

As a way to determine where to interview, researcher­s will identify Federal Emergency Management Agency-designated disaster counties to help understand where the damage was the most extensive and where rebuilding operations are likely to be the heaviest.

“It’s not like there’s a hotspot geographic­ally, as much as there are hotspots where the work is occurring,” Kammer-Kerwick said about where the traffickin­g is located. “As the reconstruc­tion and rebuild occurs, the locations of the constructi­on activities are going to change, and therefore, that’s where the behavior follows.”

Researcher­s from UT’s Institute on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault and Fe y Justicia Worker Center, which advocates for workers who were exploited during Harvey, will also assist.

“We saw employers exploiting workers after Ike, and we are seeing it again with Harvey,” said Marianela Acuña Arreaza, executive director of Fe y Justicia Worker Center, in the news release. “Wage theft is devastatin­g for workers, many of whom live locally and are recovering from Harvey themselves.”

Researcher­s hope to explain to business owners and policymake­rs specific interventi­on strategies that stop human traffickin­g. Kammer-Kerwick said an interventi­on could look like providing a program to educate workers on recognizin­g risk factors when accepting employment or job sites having to undergo specific inspection policies.

“We don’t know necessaril­y if we’re going to provide guidance or increased informatio­n to policymake­rs,” Kammer-Kerwick said, “but that’s the intent to help them better understand how to improve the lives of Texans in a post-disaster environmen­t.”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States