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Immigrant Worker Center

Builds the power of immigrant and workers of color to mobilize and organize for safe and healthy work conditions.

Hotline Numbers: 617-505-8939 or 617-505-8940
The Immigrant Worker Center is a safe place for immigrants to speak up about workplace abuse and join with a powerful network of workers demanding safe, healthy working conditions. The Worker Center builds the power of immigrants and workers of color to mobilize for safe and healthy work conditions by:

Resources and information

The Worker Center provides workers with the tools and information they need to protect their health and defend their rights.

How to Get Involved  

Call the Worker Center Hotline (617-505-8939 or 617-505-8940) to set up an appointment to learn more about:

Organizing support

The Worker Center supports workers’ efforts to take action to improve work conditions. It involves workers bringing together their co-workers and going through a step by step process to develop an action plan. With support from community groups, unions, health professionals and attorneys, workers lead their effort to achieve safe, healthy working conditions ,

Worker leadership

Worker Center members oversee and guide the Center’s efforts.  Members reach out to other workers to involve them in the Center, educate their peers and support their workplace campaigns.  A Steering Committee meets quarterly and an executive committee, elected by members, meets monthly to focus on priority workplace campaigns, leadership training planning, and policy efforts.

Policy advocacy

When MassCOSH and workers see abuses over and over again, together we look to identify ways to strengthen existing laws or procedures or establish new ones. Examples of current policy efforts are:

Uniting workers across ethnicities and neighborhoods

Through the Immigrant Worker Center Collaborative (IWCC), worker centers join together to promote mutual learning and to develop collective campaigns for greater impact.  IWCC includes MassCOSH, Brazilian Immigrant Center, Brazilian Women’s Group, CCT, Chelsea Collaborative, Chinese Progressive Association, Fuerza Laboral, Metro West Worker Center, and the Worker Center for Economic Justice.  Members from all participating worker centers convened last year and crafted the state’s first Workers’ Bill of Rights, a platform of baseline rights that IWCC members would use individually and collectively to assert workers’ rights to decent working conditions.  IWCC strengthens its effectiveness by collaborating with Justice @ Work, Greater Boston Legal Services, Community Labor United, unions and other groups.