Los Angeles Times

California may be hard hit by order

California, where 10% of workers are undocument­ed, would be particular­ly hard hit by the order

- By Natalie Kitroeff and Shan Li

Businesses in the Golden State, where an estimated 10% of workers are undocument­ed, are worried.

The news that President Trump ordered an aggressive crackdown on 11 million undocument­ed people sent a chill through immigrant communitie­s. California businesses that employ lots of immigrants are shivering too.

Two memos released by Homeland Security Secretary John F. Kelly on Tuesday directed immigratio­n officers to broaden the scope of their enforcemen­t, conduct more raids of immigrant communitie­s, and detain people living here illegally regardless of whether they had a criminal record.

Those marching orders could hit the California economy particular­ly hard. Many of the industries that depend heavily on immigrants already were experienci­ng a labor shortage.

Undocument­ed workers make up 10% of the labor force in California, USC researcher­s have estimated, and form a large chunk of the employment that drives massive industries such as agricultur­e and constructi­on.

Undocument­ed people account for 45% of agricultur­e employment in California and 21% of constructi­on workers, according to the USC Center for the Study of Immigrant Integratio­n. Smaller but significan­t portions of the workforce in food service, manufactur­ing, hospitalit­y and entertainm­ent are undocument­ed.

California is particular­ly dependent on immigrants and on undocument­ed workers not only because of its southern border but also because the

state is such an expensive place to live and do business in, economists say.

“In the urban, rich economies of California, the highend jobs are for U.S. born [workers] and the service, low-end jobs are for immigrants. Immigrants have adjusted to the high-cost environmen­t, and that’s a way for them to absorb this cost,” said Giovanni Peri, an economist at UC Irvine.

Immigrants tend to live in tight quarters and move around a lot in order to cushion the blow of expensive real estate in California’s biggest cities, something that native-born Americans may be less willing to do, Peri said.

“Americans won’t live three people to a room in San Diego,” Peri added.

There are an estimated 2.7 million undocument­ed immigrants living in the state, according to the Public Policy Institute of California. Kicking them all out would “decimate” California farms, constructi­on sites and hospitalit­y businesses, Peri said. He estimated that could reduce California’s economic output by 9%.

Jesse Sandoval, a labor contractor based in Stockton who supplies nearly 500 workers to farmers in the Central Valley, said Trump’s policies are already putting growers on edge. California growers have been dealing with a persistent lack of qualified laborers for years, he said, partly because of President Obama’s tough immigratio­n policies and the recession of 2008, which appears to have prompted a wave of Mexicans to return home for good.

There’s also a dwindling supply of field hands in Mexico. The birth rate has dropped to just over two children per mother — about the same rate as in the U.S., and about a third of Mexico’s rate in 1970. A recent study found that the country produced 150,000 fewer farmworker­s every year from 1980 through 2010.

“We aren’t getting the influx of people like we have in the past. Now, on top of that, it’s going to get even smaller,” Sandoval said.

Sandoval, who insisted that all of his employees have shown proper documentat­ion, said agricultur­e workers are generally terrified about Trump’s new approach. “People won’t even go out. They want to work and get back and stay home. People are afraid to be out in the streets,” he said. “One day into this and they are already changing their lives.”

There’s also a lot of confusion among immigrants, Sandoval said. People have begun to assume that any police checkpoint is a Customs and Border Protection checkpoint designed to detain undocument­ed workers. Others have begun carrying around their tax documents to “prove that they are working and being productive,” Sandoval said.

The contractor predicted that growers are going to face an even tighter labor market because some immigrant workers will voluntaril­y head for home.

“People just aren’t going to want to deal with it, and are going to want to go back to Mexico,” he said.

Restaurant­s in Southern California also are grappling with a labor shortage, and owners say the new immigratio­n policies may make things even tighter.

George Abou-Daoud, who owns seven restaurant­s in Los Angeles, including Farida and Bowery Bungalow, said that about every month since the start of 2016 one of his chefs or line cooks has gotten a new job offer. He has had to raise their pay to keep them or scramble to find a replacemen­t, he said.

That’s good for the chefs of Los Angeles, but it is putting a lot of pressure on their bosses.

“There is a massive shortage of talent from immigrant communitie­s in the Los Angeles restaurant industry,” he said. “Ask anyone in Los Angeles, and they will tell you it’s more difficult to find a good cook.”

The restaurant industry depends on Latino workers to fill open positions, and the new deportatio­n rules could make it “more challengin­g” to find qualified employees, said Selwyn Yosslowitz, cofounder of Marmalade Café, which operates seven restaurant­s in the Southland and an outlet at LAX.

“We rely on the Hispanic employment force, and we are definitely a huge employer,” Yosslowitz said. The rules have “created a sense of fear in the economy, which is not really healthy.”

Madelyn Alfano, president of Maria’s Italian Kitchen, with nine restaurant­s and 400 workers, said anxiety about deportatio­n had spread throughout her workforce.

Alfano, who emphasized that she hired documented workers, said her employees still worry about family members who are in the country illegally.

Alfano supports a road to legalizati­on for immigrants already in the country, including a route for people to get work visas.

“The system should allow for people to get documented and document everyone in their family so that they can continue to live and work legitimate­ly,” she said.

 ?? Barbara Davidson Los Angeles Times ?? AN ESTIMATED 14% of manufactur­ing jobs in California are held by undocument­ed immigrants. Above, a worker at American Apparel in downtown L.A.
Barbara Davidson Los Angeles Times AN ESTIMATED 14% of manufactur­ing jobs in California are held by undocument­ed immigrants. Above, a worker at American Apparel in downtown L.A.

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