Oh well, welcome to my world in the 1990's. People who have been in a place for a long time, several generations, say, are in their social comfort zone to the extent that it is very difficult for them to contemplate relocation. This seems particularly inherent to the southeastern United States. For generations, they've been going elsewhere when they have to (up north, Detroit city, etc.) but coming home every time they get a chance.
As they would tell you, my family is here, my support system is here, my heart is here, my people and my people's people are buried here, I don't want to leave. True, many people have left for greener pastures, and we when closing the small plants did have "relocation assistance " as a service. It was very rarely used. People in these areas were willing to commute hundreds of miles a day, but they were very resistant to relocating out of their "comfort zones." Ironically, we did find a lot of people willing to do retraining, a lot of them in the medical field, and that worked for them for a while. But now in rural areas in our wonderful states who've refused the Medicaid expansion, the local rural hospitals have closed in multitudes, and now these people are out of the jobs they've trained for.
As for reporting illegal activities, as I said in my post, everyone in our area knew these people were being brought in from another part of the world, were not legal to work, and yet there they were, semi-surviving in our poor place to be, far away from everything they knew and loved and were comfortable with, sending that money home and delighted for a chance to do it. Who ya gonna call? You find no one is interested in your complaints. OSHA kept staying around, as people lost fingers and were stabbed and mangled. As I've always said, thank God for the feds, they were the only thing that kept things even semi civilized. And even then before they'd been weakened like they have now, they were understaffed and unable to cover everything they were supposed to be covering.
And of course, eventually it becomes much cheaper and more simple to take the manufacturing, butchering, processing, etc. to that other part of the world and bring it back for our consumption. So the plant packed up and left over 7000 damaged former employees, a big empty box, and a lot of really terrible pollution that has been suspected of producing health problems dumped in the water supply and in our landfills. So for the very brief time this person is there, I'd suggest that instead of fighting the buzz saw, he save his money, getting ready to leave when it becomes inevitable. But don't for one minute suspect you're going to be "Norma Ray" and going to start a big old movement to make things better by your complaints. There are a lot of things that are going to need fixing, most of them will not be fixed in time to help this OP.