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For a lot of people, the pandemic was an economic low point — for Fidel, a carwash worker in Los Angeles, the immigration raids are hitting him even harder.
“To me, this is uglier than before,” he said in Spanish. “If you leave the house, you have this fear that they’re going to detain you, they’re going to deport you.” Fidel is in his 50s and came to the U.S. from Mexico about 30 years ago. Marketplace isn’t using his real name due to his concerns about immigration enforcement. For years, Fidel made a living cleaning cars — working six days, 48 hours a week. Then, in June, Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids targeted carwash workers.
Now, Fidel said, it’s much harder to get work if you don’t have immigration papers. He’s lucky if he gets an hour a week.
When he thinks back, during the pandemic, he missed work for a total of about six weeks. This time, it’s been six months without a steady paycheck. He spends his days inside his home and is scraping by to pay his rent, medication, and food. “I’m not eating three meals a day. I eat two times, and just a little bit,” he said. “Sometimes you have to pay [the bills] and go without eating.” Acquaintances and friends are helping him find odd jobs here and there, or are loaning him money. But Fidel isn’t hopeful his economic situation will improve soon. “It’s horrible,” he said. “You live with so much fear.”
Months after they began, ICE raids have continued, wreaking havoc on LA’s carwash workers.
In early December, the CLEAN Carwash Worker Center in LA, which aims to empower, organize, and advocate for carwashers, reported multiple raids in one day. “We had two car washes be raided,” said Flor Melendrez, executive director of the worker center. “One where they took one person that was a U.S. citizen, and another one where they took six workers.” |