The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Poultry plants

- Staff writer Tamar Hallerman contribute­d to this report.

Enforcemen­t seized employment records and arrested 243 people at its processing facility in Morton, Miss. Wednesday. The company said it participat­es in E-Verify, a federal employment verificati­on system, but people can fool that system with stolen identifica­tion documents.

“For years, Koch Foods also has implemente­d a strict and thorough employment verificati­on policy of additional comprehens­ive measures to ensure Koch Foods hires and retains only authorized workers,” the company said. “It has vigilantly followed those measures.”

ICE spokesman Bryan Cox said he would not discuss if and when his agency would carry out similar enforcemen­t in Georgia.

“While we cannot speculate to the future, at present it does not encompass any locations in Georgia,” he said.

Federal authoritie­s executed search warrants at seven sites across Mississipp­i last week, arresting 680 people suspected of being in the country illegally. Of those, 303 were placed in deportatio­n proceeding­s and released from custody and 377 are still detained at facilities in Louisiana and Mississipp­i. The arrests, according to ICE, stemmed from a yearlong investigat­ion.

ICE said in court records that the Koch Foods plant in Morton drew the agency’s attention after it tracked unauthoriz­ed immigrants to that location, using coordinate­s from federal electronic monitoring ankle bracelets.

In 2006 in Georgia, federal authoritie­s raided a chicken processing plant in Stillmore and several homes in and around Emanuel County in east Georgia. More than 120 people suspected of being in the country illegally, mostly men, were arrested.

Afterward, many people went into hiding or left town, failing to show up for their jobs at the lumber yards, steel mills and produce companies across the county and in neighborin­g communitie­s. Many women and children were left behind, some without resources. Small local businesses reported suffering losses.

Jerry Gonzalez, executive director of the Georgia Associatio­n of Latino Elected Officials, fears Georgia could experience something like that again following the events in Mississipp­i.

“If we were to remove undocument­ed workers from the picture, our poultry industry would collapse in Georgia,” he said. “Our economy would take a serious hit, and it would be destructiv­e to families all around this state.”

Georgia’s poultry industry — it employs tens of thousands of workers across the state and generates billions of dollars in economic activity — follows state and federal employment laws, said Mike Giles, president of the Georgia Poultry Federation, a trade associatio­n.

“My members are literally doing everything they can with the tools they have at their disposal to ensure they are hiring a legal workforce,” he said.

The National Chicken Council, a nonprofit trade group that represents the broiler chicken industry, sent President Donald Trump a letter Friday, saying “the government does not provide employers with a reliable verificati­on method to prevent identity fraud and document falsificat­ion and confirm with confidence that new hires are legally authorized to work in the United States.”

Also on Friday, three Democratic congressme­n — including Homeland Security Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson of Mississipp­i — asked the Trump administra­tion to turn over documents about the costs of the raids, how many people were detained and how many families with children were split up.

The issue has already resonated among several of the Democrats running to represent Georgia’s 7th Congressio­nal District, which encompasse­s Cumming and rural portions of Forsyth County. Some shared stories on social media of the children whose parents were taken by federal agents during the Mississipp­i raids. And some, including party activist Nabilah Islam and state Rep. Brenda Lopez Romero, said what happened in Mississipp­i underscore­s the need for an overhaul of the nation’s immigratio­n system.

“If you like to eat vegetables or any meat, you’re relying on the fact that that food is available because of undocument­ed labor,” said Lopez Romero, an immigratio­n attorney who has put the issue at the heart of her bid for Congress. The way to “minimize the effects on U.S. citizen children is by making sure we have a pathway to regularizi­ng one’s status (for their parents) so there’s an actual line to get into.”

U.S. Rep. Sanford Bishop, D-Albany, who represents a largely rural southwest Georgia district, said he is concerned because “Georgia produces more poultry than any other state in the nation, and the poultry industry, and most of agricultur­e, rely heavily on immigrant and guest worker labor. We need a comprehens­ive immigratio­n bill that will ensure agricultur­e employers have the legal workers that they need to keep American agricultur­e the most productive in the world.”

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