[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E216]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
INTRODUCTION OF THE U.S.-CNMI HUMAN DIGNITY ACT
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HON. GEORGE MILLER
of california
in the house of representatives
Thursday, February 11, 1999
Mr. GEORGE MILLER of California. Mr. Speaker, today forty seven of
our colleagues join Mr. Spratt and myself in introducing the Insular
Fair Wage and Human Rights Act of 1999 which will permit the U.S.
territory of the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (U.S./
CNMI) to be treated more like a state under certain provisions of law.
Along with the privilege of flying the American flag, the CNMI has
the responsibility to live within the mores of the United States; and
the United States has the responsibility to assist the territory with
its growth in becoming a strong member of the American family. The
taxpayers of America have supplied the U.S./CNMI with tens of millions
of dollars in assistance over the years. The U.S./CNMI has failed to
live up to its pledge to create a responsible government and a just
society.
The U.S./CNMI has morphed into an offshore sweatshop, wrapping itself
in the American flag to circumvent quota restrictions and escape
payment of hundreds of millions of dollars in duties on imported
garments. The Congress cannot continue to irresponsibly ignore the
worsening crisis or the exploitation of tens of thousands of foreign
workers on American soil.
The local U.S./CNMI government was granted temporary control over
immigration and minimum wage in the 1970s. The U.S./CNMI has exploited
this temporary authority to import tens of thousands of low-paid,
contracted, destitute, workers from Asian nations to staff garment
factories and virtually all other private sector jobs. The contract
workers now substantially outnumber the number of local U.S. residents.
These foreign workers pay between $3,000--$7,000 to recruiters in
their homelands for promised jobs. They are led to believe they are
coming to work at good jobs in ``America'' only to arrive in the U.S./
CNMI to find the jobs are not what they believed and in many cases that
the jobs never even existed. Over 90 percent of all private sector jobs
are held by foreign contract workers.
The bill I introduce today will crack down on the enormous, mostly
foreign-owned garment industry that employ thousands of foreign workers
to sew foreign fabric into garments bearing the ``Made in USA'' label
which is then shipped to the U.S. mainland quota and duty free. There
is nothing about the U.S./CNMI garments that is made in America yet
this year well over $1 billion worth of garments will flood the U.S.
market, depriving the U.S. Treasury of $300 million and unfairly
competing with stateside garment factories that pay the U.S. minimum
wage to workers who work in safe factories under the protections of all
U.S. labor and immigration laws.
Numerous reports by journalists and the media, human rights workers,
Federal agencies, religious organizations, and the administrations of
Presidents Reagan, Bush and Clinton have documented widespread human
rights abuses suffered by indentured workers in the U.S./CNMI. After
traveling to the U.S./CNMI last year and meeting with local government
representatives, federal officials, private business owners, and
foreign workers, I issued my own report, Beneath the American Flag,
which details systematic exploitation that would be tolerated no where
else in this country. That report can be found on the Resource
Committee Democrats' web page at www.House.Gov/Resources/105Cong/
Democrat/Democrat.htm.
And yet, despite this mountain of evidence, repeated requests to
Chairman Young of the Resources Committee, and over 80 cosponsors, we
have been unable to secure even a hearing on my reform legislation, let
alone a markup.
No Member of Congress would permit this situation to exist in his or
her congressional district for one day. Yet we stand by, year after
year, report after report, expose after expose, as the problems persist
in the U.S./CNMI.
The legislation I have introduced today will extend Federal
immigration and minimum wage laws to the U.S./CNMI as well as require
that the integrity and intent of the ``Made in USA'' label and duty and
quota waivers be reinstated. Additionally, this bill will permit U.S.
Customs agents the authority to inspect cargo and persons entering the
U.S./CNMI for suspected illegal activity.
I am hopeful that the delegation led by Congressman Young, which
leaves for the U.S./CNMI and other Pacific destinations tomorrow, will
meet with those who have experienced these deplorable conditions and
that, upon the Chairman's return, he will finally agree to conduct
impartial hearings on my legislation. We owe it to the taxpayers of the
United States, to the textile workers of this country who are enduring
unfair competition, and to the garment workers and other foreign
workers in Saipan who are being forced to experience a distasteful and
unrepresentative side of America.
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