Article from the Sonoma County Gazette I picked up when I was in the area last week. This DL site was one we protested when SOS was actually an activist group instead of its' current shill as Nightingale's misbegotten acomplishments page. Anyway, the liberals in the pelosi area helped build them a free pest hangout in exchange for them not using the streets. Guess what? Big surprise that they told the libs to eat dirt too.
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Now look at their pathetic plea to scamming employers and their tools, the Day laborers
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Defending
Home
By HolLynn D’Lil
Under cover of darkness Grateronians
reinstalled posts that had been removed in
the broad light of day.
Last month, with the cooperation of
the merchants, the Graton Community
Club and other stakeholders, the
Graton Labor Center, Centro Laboral,
installed posts for mounting “NO
HIRING” signs on Graton and Ross
Roads. They installed the posts about
10:00 in the morning, but within a few
hours the posts had disappeared.
Friday evening, Centro Laboral
members and supporters reinstalled
the posts while community members
Toni Winter and Barbra Friedman,
post watchers at the corner of Graton
and Ross Roads, lingered to make sure
that they would not be removed again.
Cricket Seagull, David Upchurch
and Terry Winter (member of Centro
Laboral), said they installed the posts
at night in order to be more sensitive
to the day laborers who still wait on
Graton Road to be hired, rather than go
to the Centro Laboral’s location on Bower
Street. In all they installed five posts
that will make it clear to employers
that no hiring is to be done on Graton
Road. There are already many signs
that direct potential employers to the
location of the Graton Labor Center on
Bowen Street, a block from downtown.
The Friday night adventure was
another interesting chapter in the
story of a little town trying to solve the
problems of two cultures and disparate
needs. Graton has been the site of
congregating day laborers from south
of the border for over 80 years. Centro
Laboral is a community-supported
organization to help the day laborers
and to integrate them in a way that
works for the community. Two years
ago, after years of collaboration among
the laborers and the town folks, a site
for Centro Laboral with a meeting building, restrooms and showers was
built on Bowen Street. Today it is a
showcase for the community, with
lovely gardens and picnic facilities.
However, many day laborers
continue to hang out on Graton Road,
rather than go to the Bower Street
facility. The reasons are many, but in
an effort to address the root cause -
that local employers themselves don’t
go to Centro Laboral to hire the day
laborers - the community with Centro
Laboral is planning on erecting large,
impossible to ignore signs that say,
“NO HIRING"
Home
By HolLynn D’Lil
Under cover of darkness Grateronians
reinstalled posts that had been removed in
the broad light of day.
Last month, with the cooperation of
the merchants, the Graton Community
Club and other stakeholders, the
Graton Labor Center, Centro Laboral,
installed posts for mounting “NO
HIRING” signs on Graton and Ross
Roads. They installed the posts about
10:00 in the morning, but within a few
hours the posts had disappeared.
Friday evening, Centro Laboral
members and supporters reinstalled
the posts while community members
Toni Winter and Barbra Friedman,
post watchers at the corner of Graton
and Ross Roads, lingered to make sure
that they would not be removed again.
Cricket Seagull, David Upchurch
and Terry Winter (member of Centro
Laboral), said they installed the posts
at night in order to be more sensitive
to the day laborers who still wait on
Graton Road to be hired, rather than go
to the Centro Laboral’s location on Bower
Street. In all they installed five posts
that will make it clear to employers
that no hiring is to be done on Graton
Road. There are already many signs
that direct potential employers to the
location of the Graton Labor Center on
Bowen Street, a block from downtown.
The Friday night adventure was
another interesting chapter in the
story of a little town trying to solve the
problems of two cultures and disparate
needs. Graton has been the site of
congregating day laborers from south
of the border for over 80 years. Centro
Laboral is a community-supported
organization to help the day laborers
and to integrate them in a way that
works for the community. Two years
ago, after years of collaboration among
the laborers and the town folks, a site
for Centro Laboral with a meeting building, restrooms and showers was
built on Bowen Street. Today it is a
showcase for the community, with
lovely gardens and picnic facilities.
However, many day laborers
continue to hang out on Graton Road,
rather than go to the Bower Street
facility. The reasons are many, but in
an effort to address the root cause -
that local employers themselves don’t
go to Centro Laboral to hire the day
laborers - the community with Centro
Laboral is planning on erecting large,
impossible to ignore signs that say,
“NO HIRING"
EMPLOYERS of DAY LABORERS - when you read this article
and the front page article from Graton, about how these communities are
suffering because employers continue to hire laborers off the streets instead of
at the Labor Centers - PLEASE BE CONSIDERATE of the towns that have put
so much effort into creating fair labor practices for both YOU and the laborers
and the front page article from Graton, about how these communities are
suffering because employers continue to hire laborers off the streets instead of
at the Labor Centers - PLEASE BE CONSIDERATE of the towns that have put
so much effort into creating fair labor practices for both YOU and the laborers
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