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Hershey Warehouse Working Conditions Questioned As Foreign Students Protest

Hershey

MARK SCOLFORO   08/18/11 10:07 PM ET   AP

HERSHEY, Pa. — Foreign students working at a candy warehouse protested conditions and pay Thursday, chanting on Chocolate Avenue under streetlights shaped like Hershey's Kisses, arguing that they were employed under the guise of a cultural exchange but toil away in what amounts to a sweets sweatshop. The State Department said it was investigating.

More than 100 students gathered in touristy downtown Hershey, home to the nation's second-largest candy maker, complaining of hard physical labor, steep pay deductions for rent that often left them with little spending money, and no cultural enrichment. They said their concerns were met with threats of deportation.

"We have no money, we have no time and we have no power," said Yana Brenzey, a 19-year-old journalism student from Zaporizhzhya, Ukraine.

She said she had no idea that she would be lifting 40-pound boxes or netting only about $200 a week when she began working in early May at the warehouse run by Westerville, Ohio-based Exel Inc.

A spokesman for the Hershey Co. would say only that the corporation expects its vendors to treat employees "fairly and equitably." An Exel spokeswoman said the company was working with SHS Staffing Solutions of Lemoyne, Pa., which helped place the students, to resolve the situation.

Late Thursday, Exel issued a statement saying it would stop using student workers once the current group leaves in mid-September.

The students earn about $8 an hour, the same as their American counterparts, and were fully informed about the nature of the work, SHS spokesman Sean Connolly said. The company does not intend to fire the students for their protest, he said.

"We continue to discuss the concerns they have," Connolly said. "We hope there's a resolution."

The leader of the Council for Educational Travel USA, a nonprofit based in San Clemente, Calif., that also helped place the students, asserted that their motives weren't entirely pure.

"Somebody has been circulating a letter that they will get several thousand dollars back if they protest and be a part of this movement," said CEO Rick Anaya. "We have not gotten any cooperation from the kids. Somebody is promising them a lot of money in order to participate in this protest."

He acknowledged that the jobs are "fast-paced" and involve heavy lifting, but he said the students knew what they would be doing. He said he became aware of complaints two weeks ago and sent managers to Pennsylvania to work out differences.

The students were offered the opportunity to leave the job if they were unhappy, he said.

They are among more than 100,000 college students who come to the U.S. each year on J-1 visas, which supply resorts and other businesses with cheap seasonal labor as part of a program aimed at fostering cultural understanding.

An Associated Press investigation published in December found students who were forced to work in strip clubs instead of restaurants, others taking home $1 an hour or even less, some living in crowded apartments or eating on floors. Members of Congress have expressed concern about misuse of the program.

The State Department is sending staff to Pennsylvania to investigate.

"The Department of State takes its responsibilities for administering the J-1 Visa Program seriously," spokesman Mark Toner said. "It is our responsibility to ensure that all J-1 visa participants are accorded their rights under all provisions of the Summer Work Travel program."

Yilmazcan Cebe, a 20-year-old civil engineering student from Ankara, Turkey, said that his complaints were met with threats to force him to pay the remainder of his housing costs and that he might be barred from returning to the United States.

"We are not real workers," said Cebe, who blamed a persistent wrist pain on the tough labor. "We are just students."

Student protesters also came from China, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Mongolia, Poland and Romania. They said their goals were to have all the companies related to their employment negotiate on repaying them and converting their jobs to living-wage positions.

The walkout is in its second day. On Wednesday, about 150 people picketed outside the warehouse several miles away in a protest organized by the National Guestworker Alliance. Three people were arrested: Pennsylvania AFL-CIO president Rick Bloomingdale and two other organized labor officials.

On Thursday, the students protested with a bullhorn, leaflets and a petition they planned to present to Hershey executives.

"All we can do is work and sleep," said Godwin Efobi, 26, a Ukrainian student originally from Nigeria.

Most students showed up for the first shift Thursday, and the walkout isn't disrupting warehouse activities, Exel spokeswoman Lynn Anderson said.

The complaints began this year with two students from Central America who went to the state AFL-CIO, which referred the matter to the national office and the New Orleans-based National Guestworker Alliance, Bloomingdale said.

One foreign worker, he said, showed him a paycheck for 32 hours – at $8.35 an hour – that amounted to just $44 after state and local taxes and deductions for rent.

"I'm shocked that all of this is happening in modern-day America," Bloomingdale said. "These are 400 warehouse jobs, packing jobs."

Danielle Grijalva, director of the Committee for Safety of Foreign Exchange Students, an advocacy group in Oceanside, Calif., said the problems faced by the workers at the chocolate plant are not unique.

Similar complaints have been made for years across the country, and the State Department has not done enough to fix the J-1 program, she said.

"People are leaving our country hating America, hating Americans," she said. "If this is the impression of the United States that we want these students to have, then perhaps we should thank the State Department, because they are not implementing regulations to protect these students."

___

Associated Press writers Marc Levy in Harrisburg, Pa., Holbrook Mohr in Jackson, Miss., and Matthew Lee in Washington contributed to this report.

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HERSHEY, Pa. — Foreign students working at a candy warehouse protested conditions and pay Thursday, chanting on Chocolate Avenue under streetlights shaped like Hershey's Kisses, arguing that the...
HERSHEY, Pa. — Foreign students working at a candy warehouse protested conditions and pay Thursday, chanting on Chocolate Avenue under streetlights shaped like Hershey's Kisses, arguing that the...
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Dick Stone
My Andalusian works hard and loves his job
01:45 AM on 09/21/2011
A bunch of whiny wimps, that shouldn't even have a job that an American citizen should have. You could give these wimps a paid week at the beach and they would complain that it is too hot, give them a ski trip to Aspen and they would complain that it is too cold. It is a job after all and it is called work for a reason, if you want to sit in an ivory tower every day eating bon bons, you had better get an education, which is also hard work, and get another job which will also be hard work, and stay at it until you become successful enough to sit in that ivory tower, and you will then find out that it also takes work to stay there.
01:43 AM on 08/24/2011
Too many people leave the United States feeling cheated and taken advantage of for being from another country, especially if they get stuck with being impoverished here due to hidden fees/conditions in paperwork (Imagine if we went to a different country and got the same treatment). It doesn't help that a lot of polititians are spreading hateful messages about immigrants as if they are not even human... It is a shame that many come to this country thinking it is the land of opportunity, but leave it thinking/feeling it is a land of bigotory exploitation.
07:34 AM on 08/24/2011
I agree. I think some of the comments that denigrate the students protesting are from people who have not left the U.S. They do not know what it feels like to be in a foreign country, perhaps not be fluent in the language, to encounter a completely different culture. This experience is challenging when you are in a GOOD environment in which the people care. I have lived/studied in several different countries. I was 18 when I traveled for the first time to a foreign country and stayed with a family. The same age as some of these. I did a lot of studying abroad between 18-25, as an undergrad and graduate student. Fortunately, for me, in these countries the people were always welcoming and usually tried to help me. I am so grateful for this. My heart goes out to these students--to arrive in a foreign country and be treated like crap and have to deal with the "normal" cultural shock is extremely stressful. This is not what this program was designed to do. I am also distressed at how fellow Americans just lack compassion and also the understanding that this is a "divide and conquer" situation if you let it be. Have the American worker fight over the scraps with the foreign students, and the companies continue to exploit them both by driving down the wages with cheap labor by abusing the J-1 visas.
01:01 PM on 08/23/2011
Obviously, citizens do not even apply for these jobs, otherwise, why would Hershey hire foreign students at a rate similar to their citizens counterparts?
I understand that unemployment is high in this country and the U.S. is generally going through financial harship, but that's not the foreign students fault for asking a little more! it is the corporations fault; for not paying taxes, for not creating jobs, and for not paying their taxes, despite the billion in profits they make each year.
07:36 AM on 08/24/2011
Maybe these jobs are not advertised to citizens. The company still makes money because even though the rate might be the same, they pay 8% less overall with J-1 visas because they don't have to pay some payroll taxes.
05:53 PM on 08/22/2011
HERSHEY = Slavery, Involuntary Servitude, Child Abuse. They Use Money + Political Connections To Muscle Their Way Out! -
YOUTUBE:
- Hershey Childrens Home Sex Crimes Coverup, $3M Settlement Milton Hershey School PA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jQkvEl6XJhQ
- Hershey Childrens Home Trust Used to Benefit Insiders Politicians
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H12afWUeoIc
- Lawsuit: Hershey Children's Home Trust Used to Benefit Insiders, BOD
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CyFNCsj4kyc
- Child Porn Charges Hershey Childrens Home Houseparent Administrator
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z-ByBeKLNB0
LATEACHER1X
tellin' it like it is
08:09 PM on 08/21/2011
What the H??!! Why were these foreign students given visas to do jobs that Americans need?
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05:30 PM on 08/21/2011
This is the organization that sponsored them http://www.cetusa.org/public/

"If you decide to participate on the CETUSA Work and Travel Program, you are in for an adventure! The Work and Travel Program offers you a chance to spend your summer vacation in the U.S. while working for an American company. You will experience firsthand what life is like for a typical american young adult. You will gain valuable work and life experience, expand your resume, improve your English, have opportunity to travel in the U.S., make great memories and form lasting relationships. No matter where you end up in the U.S., your Work and Travel Program is sure to be a summer you will never forget!"

The J-1 Visa is a cultural exchange program, These kids got duped working 3rd shift in an industrial plant. Even though it was inteended to be a cultural exchange program it has become a labor program where foreignors are exploited and unemployed citizens can not find work.
03:43 PM on 08/21/2011
So.......the Hershey company shut down much of it's operation and shipped US jobs to Mexico, then they import foreign kids and pay them much less than they were paying Americans. I've been to Hershey many times, however I NEVER buy their products anymore. When you pick up a candy bar look to see where it's made, it might surprise you.
LATEACHER1X
tellin' it like it is
08:19 PM on 08/21/2011
Thanks. No more Hershey bars for me.
NancyY
carpe diem!
10:49 PM on 08/20/2011
From the article: "Student protesters also came from China, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Mongolia, Poland and Romania. They said their goals were to have all the companies related to their employment negotiate on repaying them and converting their jobs to living-wage positions."

My question: just what is their idea of "living wage"? Making the same kind of money that someone with education and experience would make, while they obviously don't have any education or experience?

Exel stated that they would stop involving foreign students once the current group leaves in mid-September. Well, mid-September is coming up soon enough, and we can't get rid of them soon enough. One thing that they will take away with them is the fact that Americans work hard - even American students - to reach their goals.
07:27 AM on 09/02/2011
They are students, so they have some education. A "living wage" is a wage you can live on, er, more than $44 a week (after board) for 32hrs of manual labor. These are not illegal immigrants (who still deserve fair wages) but students on a State Department cultural exchange who PAID $3-6,000!! They come from countries where this is a substantial sum!

AMERICANS working 3-11/11-7 doing manual labor deserve more than $10/hr, not $8 as these students received. It appears (I would like to know exactly how much was deducted for what type of housing) they were way overcharged for housing and threatened with deportation when they complained.
Personally, I am embarrassed for my country. I live abroad and am treated fairly by my Korean employers (though I had different experiences in Slovakia and Czech Republic, where there is little recourse even for legally employed foreigners). Thus, I'm in my 9th year in Korea!
I only consume fair-wage organic chocolate (costs more, but it's "sweeter") and avoid plastic Hershey/Nestle garbage. . . and literally, the cost for that cheap crap is way more than the vending machines would have you think!
I hope these students can somehow recoup their losses and still get out and meet some of the wonderful people in the USA. If not, I encourage them to look at Korea offers many private and government scholarships for foreign students. There's a lot of culture here, low crime and lovely people.
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Derek Spisak
09:47 PM on 08/20/2011
This program is the biggest scam for cheap labor... it is heavily used in tourist areas and far too often (in every market I have worked) most of these students are taken advantage of.
07:39 PM on 08/20/2011
>The complaints began this year with two students from Central America who went to the state AFL-CIO

Well, at least we know who's behind this charade, and why the protests seem so well organized.  By the way, kids, you're being used.  Not by Hershey.  By the AFL-CIO.  They don't want better conditions for you.  They want this to be front page news and for people to react with "then send them home".  They want J-1 (as well as H1B, and other foreign work programs) eliminated.
LATEACHER1X
tellin' it like it is
08:21 PM on 08/21/2011
Good for the AFL-CIO. Americans need jobs, in case you haven't noticed. And if these kids can afford a $3000-$6000 visa, they don't need the money, so why are they here?
NancyY
carpe diem!
04:09 PM on 08/20/2011
I think some research needs to be done about places where the J-1 students complain about working; if there are enough complaints, then that program should not operate at those places anymore. I think some research should also be done to count the number of applications and resumes from citizens who would qualify for work at the positions that the happy J-1 students hold. If there are, say, 20 qualified citizen applicants for every J-1 position, then we really have to re-think the program. I firmly believe that, considering our current economic situation in this country, we cannot deny jobs to citizens and fill them with foreigners, students or no.
06:29 PM on 08/23/2011
Well, Nancy, let's hope the State Department shuts down this lousy Work&Travel program and not comes up with another brilliant idea like "Sell a kidney, visit USA" project. It appears they are very resourceful when it comes to ripping foreign citizens off their money.
Then you'll get the opportunity to work your butt off for Hershey's for $44 a week and be happy.
NancyY
carpe diem!
11:08 PM on 08/23/2011
You need to look into this issue more. I have read accounts where "intermediaries" between the students and EVAL (the US company) may have pulled some kind of stunt. Graft and corruption are still rife in the post-Soviet and other countries.
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1oldhippie
yes, WE can!
01:31 PM on 08/20/2011
So I've been unemployed for three years. Now we find out, the jobs we didn't export, are filled by workers that they import?
We REALLY need to rethink that.
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lotusgirl
Turned off the TV and stepped out of the Matrix
09:10 AM on 08/20/2011
With high youth unemployment, why areas importing in a labor supply? Maybe it's because they are easier to exploit?
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elamatt
Ever the optimistic realist
01:59 PM on 08/19/2011
In these days of HIGH unemployment must we continue with the j-1 visas?! Are there no citizen-students who'd like a summer job? Let's hold off on the "cultural job" summer program until we're at full-employment; this program doesn't seem to add "much" to our overseas credibility, if that was its intent.
NancyY
carpe diem!
04:08 PM on 08/20/2011
I mentioned in an earlier post that years ago that we had visited OCMD. The boutiques along the boardwalk were staffed with many young, college-age students who spoke with different accents - mostly Slavic or Spanish accents. I didn't realize it then, but they must have been on the J-1 program as well. These young people seemed quite happy, and this was well before the minimum wage increase. But we happened to chat with a server in a wonderful Greek restaurant (in Delaware, I think). We asked him if he lived in the area, and he replied that he did not - he lived farther north. He said that, in the smaller town where he lived, it was hard to find summer jobs once getting out of college for the summer - so he and his buddies would just move down to OCMD area for that time. I think they shared hotel rooms or maybe found cheap room and board somewhere else, otherwise I think their pay would not have covered their expenses. But, I wonder just how many citizen students in that fellow's position would have been happy to work where the J-1 students worked, on the boardwalk, or be housed where the J-1 students were being housed?
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elamatt
Ever the optimistic realist
06:52 PM on 08/20/2011
NancyY, you've just reminded my WHY the program has continued; our "fine, hard-working, young people" wouldn't put up with the living conditions. They'd simply phone home and tell Mom and Dad to ready the room, computer, TV, fridge etc. Can't believe I've been retired from HS teaching long enough to forget the entitlement mentality!! Thanks again!
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Derek Spisak
09:49 PM on 08/20/2011
I have seen many of the so-call housing, and no one should have to live in them...
09:15 AM on 08/19/2011
So, really, Exel is to blame here, not Hershey. Also, how can they say in one sentence:

""All we can do is work and sleep," said Godwin Efobi, 26, a Ukrainian student originally from Nigeria"

Then two paragraphs below, they say:

"One foreign worker, he said, showed him a paycheck for 32 hours."

They SHOULD be deported.
06:46 PM on 08/20/2011
Hershey contracted Exel. Hershey owns the whole distribution center I read. Here's a link to the letter that was sent to the State Dept:

http://www.courthousenews.com/2011/08/19/Hershey.pdf