North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation (NAALC) Complaint
Court Cases
Opportunity and Fairness for Workers
On April 13, 2005, sixteen men brought from Mexico,
Guatemala and Panama to the United States as temporary workers by
United States-based companies filed a complaint under the labor side
agreement to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) seeking
enforcement of their rights under the treaty. The men suffered brutal
physical injury, stolen wages, unsafe housing, and other dangerous
employment conditions, and were denied access to the federally-funded
legal aid they needed to seek redress.
Four additional workers filed an addendum to the original petition on March 29, 2006.
Five
U.S. organizations, and six Mexican organizations, have joined the
workers’ complaint: Idaho Migrant Council; National Immigration Law
Center; Oregon Law Center; Pineros y Campesinos del Noroeste;
International Labor Rights Fund; Centro de Investigación Laboral y
Asesoría Sindical, A.C.; Frente Autentico del Trabajo; National Union
of Workers (UNT); Red Mexicana de Acción Frente al Libre Comercio; Sin
Fronteras, I.A.P.; Centro de Derechos Humanos, and El Centro de
Derechos Humanos de la Montaña "Tlachinollan" A.C.
The complaint was filed in Mexico City because the formal process set up by the NAFTA labor side agreement, called the North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation (NAALC), requires those alleging violations to petition one of NAFTA’s signatory countries to take up their complaint.
In October 2007, the Mexican government responded
to the complaint, asking the United States Department of Labor
sixty-nine sets of detailed questions regarding the extent to whcih the
workers have access to legal assistance, and the extent to which state
and federal laws, courts and agencies protect the employment rights of
H-2B workers. The Mexican government also asked the petitioners to
submit their own response to the questions. Accordingly, the Brennan
Center is working to prepare a response.
After the United States
Department of Labor and the petitioners respond, Mexico will decide
whether to pursue additional mechanisms to ensure U.S. compliance,
which could include additional investigations or inter-governmental
consulations.
Leaders in Congress have also begun to examine this issue. On April 16, 2008, Representative George Miller (D-CA) delivered testimony before the House Judiciary Committee on the need for improved legal protections for H-2B workers, including access to federally funded legal aid.
For more information about access to justice for workers in the United States with temporary visas, see a The Gift of Protection and Preserving Aliens' and Migrant Workers' Access to Civil Legal Services by Laura Klein Abel. Also, you can read news coverage of this issue in Daily Labor Report, The Seattle Times, The Sacramento Bee, and Hispanic Link.
Related Court Documents
- Mexican Government Response to NAALC Complaint (Spanish) (10/24/07)
- Mexican Government Response to NAALC Complaint (English) (10/24/07)
- NAALC Petition Addendum (Spanish) (03/30/06)
- NAALC Complaint Addendum (Spanish) (03/30/06)
- NAALC Complaint Addendum (English) (03/30/06)
- NAALC Petition on Behalf of Workers (04/13/05)
- Memorandum in Support of NAALC Complaint (04/13/05)
- NAALC Petition (04/13/05)
