Six days a week, 39-year-old Fredis vacuums vehicles at the same Los Angeles car wash where she’s been working for 18 years.
But after all that time, it’s hardly business as usual. “It’s very different, now. There’s a lot of fear… going to work, dropping the kids off at school, going out to shop,” she said in Spanish. (Marketplace isn’t publishing Fredis’ last name because of the risk of being targeted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement.) Fredis said she’s leaving the house less because of immigration raids
, but she can’t miss out on her paycheck. Her kids in LA and family back home in Honduras depend on the $16.50 she makes an hour. “What can I do? I have to work,” she said.
But something has eased her mind: This summer, a group of organizers dropped by the carwash to help her and her coworkers prepare for what to do in the case of an immigration raid. “We have to have a place where we plan to go… in case they (ICE) come,” she said. “We know what to do, now,” said Omar, another carwash worker who attended the training and whose last name is not being published due to immigration concerns. “They said if ICE comes,” he said in Spanish, “to not volunteer our names, to stay quiet and not run away.”
Omar and Fredis worked with Cynthia Ayala, an organizer with the Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy. Ayala has watched raids hit local businesses in her community. “Some folks, when it was really bad, didn't go to work,” she said. “A lot of folks, their business went down, of course.” |