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Impact of Illegal Immigration on the Wages & Employment of Black Workers
Commissioner Statements
Dissent Statement of Commissioners Michael Yaki and Arlan Melendez
We respectfully, but strongly, disagree with both the processes and outcomes involved with
this Briefing Hearing and the instant Report. We believe that the Briefing Report and its
findings and recommendations are merely the outcome of the most recent fatally flawed,
inadequate process upon which the conservative majority of the Commission is reporting.
The Report's findings and recommendations are based upon a biased record. We believe that
this underlying record was engineered in order to facilitate the narrow view which the
recommendations embody. We are deeply concerned about the lack of balance on the panels
which testified at the briefing which underlies this Report. Representatives from major,
relevant non-governmental organizations were either not invited to testify or declined to do
so due to mistrust of the motives of the Commission's conservative majority. As a result,
issues affecting Hispanic and Latino Americans were discussed and debated without their
participation or representation. This void in the record vitiates its validity, and, therefore, its
usefulness.
Further, because the process which led to the majority's adoption of Part A was
inappropriate, incomplete, and one-sided, it cannot serve as a basis from which valid findings
can be distilled or meaningful recommendations drawn. Therefore, no useful weight can be
accorded to the recommendations.
Concerns about immigration, falling wages and employment prospects for low-skilled
workers require more than unbalanced panels and sketchy anecdotal testimony. The serious
examination that any disparate impact study requires is completely missing from this report.
During challenging economic times, it is especially easy to target and scapegoat. What
should be foremost in the minds of the Commission (but which are deeply hidden by the
majority) are concerns regarding backlash and discrimination against communities because
they are perceived as residing here illegally. Only in that full context can any meaningful
report be produced. Alas, that is not and never has been the intent of the majority.
Statement and Rebuttal of Commissioner Gail Heriot
If the reader takes away one point from the Commission‘s report, it should be this: One of the
consequences of the on-going illegal immigration of low-skilled workers into the United
States is that it decreases the wages of low-skilled workers generally. This is simple supply
and demand.
To be sure, the lowering of wages for low-skilled jobs is only one among many consequences
of this immigration. There are others–good, bad and hard-to-classify. All of them must be
taken into consideration in formulating sound immigration policy. Most, however, fall
outside the jurisdiction of the Commission. The purpose of this briefing was to highlight a
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