And they say slavery was outlawed in this country?!
When Gloria Ramos took a job as a live-in nanny for a Rockville family last year, she was told she would earn $200 a week to care for three children. But Ramos, who emigrated from Ecuador five years ago, suddenly realized that caring for children was the easy part of her job.
She said she was forced to cook daily for seven members of the family. She found herself working as late as 3 a.m. to finish all her tasks. To make matters worse, her promised weekly paycheck often didn't materialize.
Three months later, Ramos quit. "I was tired of so much abuse," Ramos, 25, told a Montgomery County Council committee yesterday.
Immigrant advocates say there are hundreds of other women in Montgomery County who are too scared, poor or naive to follow Ramos's path, making them in effect modern-day slaves. Often fearful of being deported or unemployed, these women endure exhausting work hours and, in some cases, physical and mental abuse to keep their jobs. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A6246-2005Feb7.html