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By Zaldy Dandan
Variety Editor
THE chairman
of the chamber of commerce claims that the CNMI has a unified
position against the federalization of local minimum wage and immigration.
He says the only one who is not unified with us is the Washington
rep.
Who is the CNMI? According to the chamber chairman, the
chamber, the [Fitial] administration, the Legislature.
But does the chamber really speak for the CNMI, let alone the local business
community? Who are the chamber members and how many of them are active?
Who elected them to speak for the CNMI? The governor, for his part, wasnt
elected by almost 75 percent of the electorate (he didnt even win
on Saipan; Heinz did), and there are lawmakers who agree with the position
of the Wash. rep. who was elected by a clear majority of CNMI voters
to speak for them in their nations capital.
Pete A., as those who have no selective amnesia know, was on the NMI commission
that negotiated the drafting of the Covenant. As a two-term lt. governor,
he headed the CNMI 902 panel. Since 2002, he has been in Washington, D.C.,
in close consultation with the White House and members of Congress as
well as their staffers regarding CNMI matters.
The chamber chairman and this administration should be the last persons
to question the Wash. rep.s right to speak about these issues.
Pete A. knows what he is talking about and his position on federalization
makes sense in contrast with the no to federalization now, no to
federalization forever! stance of the administration and the chamber.
In his position paper submitted to the U.S. Senate Energy and Natural
Resources Committee, the governor noted that the model bill the panel
is working on was drafted almost a decade ago. He then proceeded to defend
continued local control by rehashing the rhetoric of those in the CNMI
who opposed the Murkowski bill years ago.
Local control, says the governor, is vital to the local economy. Governor,
sir, what local economy are you talking about? The one that has been in
a freefall since 1998 despite a $3.05 wage rate and an immigration system
that was once compared to the Mafia?
He also says that the CNMI wants to remain self-reliant
without
acknowledging the local governments federal bailout request last
year and its ever deepening dependence on federal dole-outs for public
health, public education, public safety and other vital services that
the CNMIs self-reliant government is supposed to provide the local
people.
Stagnant wages and a sieve-like immigration system, moreover, will not
save the administration and the chambers beloved garment industry.
U.S. consumers, like sane consumers elsewhere, will always prefer cheaper
apparel, which the local garment factories cannot produce if theyre
competing against Third World manufacturers.
And what exactly can the CNMI government show for its coddling of the
garment industry since the 1980s? Damage to the environment, a huge local
unemployment rate, a big and bankrupt government, and a tarnished image
in Washington and any place in the world where the people can Google-search
sweatshops and Jack Abramoff.
What we have is a failed status quo and this is what the reactionaries
among big business and their chums in the CNMI government are defending.
The people, in contrast, want change. They know that if these issues are
not resolved there will be no new and legitimate investors coming in,
and no new job opportunities for locals. What well have is more
of what we have right now, which is getting worse and can no longer be
endured.
The CNMI has to end this uncertainty over federalization issues once and
for all. It cannot attract solid investors if the commonwealths
labor and immigration laws remain hostage to the political situation in
Washington, D.C. The CNMI has to move forward, and Pete A.s middle-ground
position should be pursued. He favors a gradual wage hike that will take
into consideration local economic conditions, and federal immigration
rules that will allow the CNMI to have a tourist-visa waiver program and
hire the foreign workers it needs while ensuring indigenous population
protection from social and political alienation from immigrants.
(Read: A stay-limit and no green cards for alien workers.)
Pete A. offers a way out of the CNMIs deepening crisis. The governor
and the chamber want more of the same.
Send feedback to zdtion@lycos.com
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