News :: Labor
Ballco Workers Fired for SSA No Match
Workers at Ballco Manufacturing in Aurora staged a one day strike on Thursday September 20, 2007 to protest the unfair firings of eight of their co-workers the day before. The next day the company illegally fired all the workers for participating in the strike. Workers and their advocates are prepared to sue the company under the Civil Rights Act and the National Labor Relations Act.
The first eight workers were fired as part of a series of terminations targeting immigrant workers. Despite having no evidence as to the workers immigration status, the company claimed old Social Security No-Match letters were motivating the firings. No match letters sent by the Social Security Administration indicate errors such as typos or name changes that don't match a person's SS#. Over 70% of such errors affect workers who are citizens or legal permanent residents, yet employers like Ballco are using them to discriminate against immigrants. And now they are punishing workers for exercising their legal right to strike.
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Re: Ballco Workers Fired for SSA No Match
18 Oct 2007
Employers or employees can receive such a letter if a Social Security number does not match up with W-2 forms submitted by the employer. But mistakes could come from typographical errors, a name change or incomplete records, according to the Social Security Administration.
Mujica, however, said no employees have received "no match" letters from the SSA and are legal to work.
Workers like Jesus Rodriguez, who has been an employee for two years, says he and his co-workers should not be required to show documentation.
"They are not respecting our rights," he said in Spanish.
But Evelyn Marsh, an immigration law attorney in Chicago, said depending on what documentation is in question, the company may be within its legal rights. Employers, she said, "are somewhat limited, but once they have this employer-employee relationship, there's no contract."
Ballco Manufacturing Company was started by three Aurora brothers of the Szilage family around 1960 and was sold in 1989. It is among the nation's top manufacturers of valve components.
Under the Immigration Reform and Control Act, employers must verify worker eligibility within three days from the start of employment.
Some picketing workers said they have held jobs for six years or longer.