North Carolina's congressional delegation is asking the U.S. Department of Labor to listen to farmers before making changes to the visas used by seasonal farm workers.
Rep. Bob Etheridge, a Lillington Democrat, sent a letter (link below) co-signed by the state's other members of Congress to Labor Secretary Hilda Solis Tuesday asking her and her agency to consider the concerns of farm families and agricultural groups about any possible changes to the H-2A visa program.
Those visas are for foreign laborers who work on farms for less than a year and are required to return to their home country. The Labor Department is considering possible changes in wage rates, as well as in transportation and contract requirements, and the agency is seeking public comments on the topic.
Etheridge warned that some changes being considered could make the visa system more costly and burdensome to farmers and, ultimately, raise the grocery bills for consumers.
Here's your baseless speculation of the day: Kay Hagan might be Labor secretary if she loses.
That comes from Politico, which has compiled a long list of potential appointees in a Barack Obama administration:
Secretary of Labor: Former Rep. Richard Gephardt (D-Mo.); Andrew Stern, president of the Service Employees International Union; Kay Hagan of North Carolina (if she loses her challenge to U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Dole); Jeanne Shaheen, former New Hampshire governor (if she loses her challenge to U.S. Sen. John Sununu)
Hagan seems an odd choice. A business-friendly Democrat, she moved close to some national unions during her Senate campaign and indicated she would support a card-check bill.
Certainly Hagan has raised her profile to a national level with this campaign but this seems closer to a Washington parlor game than informed speculation.
U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Dole has a new ad attacking her Democratic rival, Kay Hagan.
What the ad says: The ad begins with images of a small dog barking and jumping at a fence. Narrator: "They call her 'Fibber Kay Hagan.' Fib after fib, she tries to turn us against Elizabeth Dole. But we know Elizabeth has been consistently voted one of the 10 most admired women in the world. Her clout works wonders for North Carolina. So bark away Fibber Kay. That dog don't hunt." Dole: "I'm Elizabeth Dole and I approve this message." Text on the screen says Dole "saved jobs," "saved bases," "saved farmers" and "helped sheriffs."
The background: The ad does not specify who "they" are who call Hagan "Fibber Kay."
The Dole campaign said they did not come up with the nickname, but they did not know who did.
"We're not sure who coined it, but we hear people call Kay Hagan 'Fibber Kay' on the campaign trail and we hear it frequently," said spokesman Hogan Gidley.
A search of North Carolina newspapers, blogs and Web sites did not return any references to "Fibber Kay" from before the ad began airing, and nearly all written since were about the ad itself.
The ad does not name any of the supposed "fibs" that Hagan has made.
MOST ADMIRED: Every year since 1948, the Gallup organization has surveyed a random group of Americans on the men and women in the world they most admire.
As secretary of the U.S. Department of Transportation under President Reagan, Dole first made the top 10 in 1987, returning three years later as secretary of the Labor department.
Though she received votes in other years, she returned to the top 10 as the wife of presidential candidate Bob Dole and president of the American Red Cross. Between 1996 and 2003, she was ranked between third and tenth place.
She also landed in ninth place in 2005, but she has not been on the list in the last two years.
She was in the top 10 a total of 11 times — the same number as the poet Maya Angelou and news anchor Barbara Walters.
JOBS AND BASES: The U.S. Department of Defense announced a round of base closings and other changes in 2005 as part of a regular program begun at the end of the Cold War. The multi-year process is designed to be insulated from political pressure.
Some North Carolina leaders had feared the loss of thousands of jobs — something that never materialized. A number of politicians, including Dole and Democratic Lt. Gov. Beverly Perdue, have claimed credit for North Carolina's relative success, but there is no way to quantify how much each helped.
FARMERS: In 2004, Congress and President Bush approved a buyout of the Depression-era system of price supports — or quotas — for tobacco leaf. Cigarette companies financed the buyout, passing on the costs to consumers.
The buyout is designed to put $9.6 billion into the pockets of quota owners and growers over 10 years. Some farmers have used the money to reinvest in the crop, while others chose to change crops or retire.
Dole supported the buyout during her 2002 campaign and was a vocal advocate in Congress, along with other senators from tobacco-growing states.
SHERIFFS: Since 1996, the federal government has offered a test program for sheriff's deputies to investigate illegal immigration.
Though immigration enforcement is typically handled by the federal government, the goal of the 287(g) program is to start deportation proceedings on illegal immigrants who are arrested for non-immigration related crimes.
In North Carolina, a handful of sheriffs' offices, including Mecklenburg and Wake counties, have signed up for the program, which Dole has promoted.
The federal government pays for the cost of training deputies in immigration enforcement and grants sheriffs' offices access to immigration records.
Is the ad accurate? There is no way to verify the "Fibber Kay" nickname or who coined it and no evidence it has been used. Dole has been consistently ranked among the most admired women in the world. Though the ad's claims are vague, Dole did help farmers and sheriffs in Congress, but there is no way to quantify her role in saving the state's military bases.
— Ryan Teague Beckwith and David Ingram