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SOUTHERN ARIZONA ENDODONTICS I NSURANCE PROCESSOR Education Yavapai College Teachers General Prestige Maintenance USA Area Manager Technical Yavapai College Analyst Banner Programmer General GROUNDS CONTROL LANDCAPE FOREMAN & LABORERS Dental Apache Dental Porcelain Techs Retail TOTAL WINE & MORE WINE TEAM MEMBERS, CASHIER & STOCK MEMEBERS Hourly UpdateICE agents raid new Yuma school site for illegal workersAssociated Press
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 10.11.2006
YUMA - Immigration agents raided the construction site of
Yuma's newest high school looking for undocumented workers, detaining
six workers for questioning and searching the offices of a site
contractor.
About 50 agents from the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and
the Border Patrol conducted the workplace enforcement raid Tuesday
morning, with backup from Yuma police and a helicopter.
Yuma Union High School District Superintendent Tim Foist said the six
who were detained were expected to return to work once their status was
cleared. All were employees of contractors working on the new $50
million Gila Ridge High School.
Foist said the raid was an example of the national illegal immigration
debate hitting home, and said he supported the checks.
"We said, 'Do not hire illegals,'" Foist said. "And we think that's been
followed. We believe our job site is being handled in the right way."
Of the six workers who were detained, two were being held clarify their
immigration status, said Jim Pilkington, owner of Pilkington
Construction Co., the firm managing subcontractors involved in the
project. One of those workers had been on the job for 10 years.
"We do our homework," he said. "We have pretty strict policies to make
sure we do not hire illegal aliens."
ICE spokesman Russell Ahr the agency has conducted similar worksite
enforcement investigations in the past, and more are expected as the
agency shifts its enforcement "thrust" under the Secure Border
Initiative. The added focus is on employers who hire illegal workers.
"We're looking to get criminal indictments against people who knew they
were illegal and put them to work," Ahr said.
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