The Mercury News

Immigrant workers ready for May Day rallies

Demonstrat­ions this year likely to rival size of historic marches in 2006

- By Tatiana Sanchez tsanchez@bayareanew­sgroup.com

For the first time since 2010 when Maria Guadalupe Betancourt opened her Mendoza’s Restaurant on San Jose’s McKee Road, she will close its doors for a day on May 1.

On Monday, the Mexican immigrant and her staff of 40 — wearing customized white T-shirts printed with phrases such as “Black Lives Matter” and “No human is illegal” — will join hundreds of thousands of people nationwide in massive May Day demonstrat­ions denouncing the Trump administra­tion’s stringent immigratio­n policies.

With demonstrat­ions and strikes planned across the Bay Area — including an ICE protest in San Francisco, a shutdown of the Port of Oakland, employee walkouts at some of Silicon Valley’s tech giants and at dozens of schools — the protests will likely rival the magnitude of the historic May Day

“This country would be nothing without immigrants. That’s the way it is, even if they don’t want to recognize it. Even if they treat us like criminals, the reality is that we’re not. We come to work.” — Maria Guadalupe Betancourt, owner of Mendoza’s Restaurant in San Jose which will close on Monday

rallies of 2006, when millions of people across the U.S. took to the streets demanding federal immigratio­n reform.

“We as organizers see May 1 as a continuum of the campaigns that have been happening year-round to protect our communitie­s,” said Sagnicthe Salazar, an organizer with Oakland Sin Fronteras and the Xicana Moratorium Coalition.

Betancourt said she’s closing the restaurant as a show of solidarity. The 48year-old was hired as a cook at another Mendoza’s location 20 years ago after immigratin­g to San Jose from Michoacán, Mexico.

“This country would be nothing without immigrants,” said Betancourt. “That’s the way it is, even if they don’t want to recognize it. Even if they treat us like criminals, the reality is that we’re not. We come to work.”

Alicia Gallegos, Betancourt’s niece and manager of the restaurant, said participat­ing in the demonstrat­ions is a “social and moral duty.” The family plans to carpool with its employees to Mexican Heritage Plaza in San Jose on Monday, where an estimated 10,000 people are expected to rally before marching to the Arena Greens along North Autumn and West Santa Clara streets.

“As Latinos we’re more united right now,” Gallegos said. “We want to make change, and the only thing we ask for is respect for our rights. We’re here contributi­ng to this country, and the only thing we want is to move our families forward.”

Building on momentum from the March for Science, the Women’s March on Washington and other historic rallies challengin­g Trump administra­tion policies, organizers said they expect Monday’s demonstrat­ions to bring together people of all background­s.

“This administra­tion has brought together more people as allies,” said Maria Marroquín, executive director of the Day Worker Center of Mountain View, explaining that the 2006 rallies drew mostly Latinos.

“This administra­tion has seen a lot of legal losses lately, and little by little, they need to notice and accept that we are the people and we have the power.”

The Day Worker Center is among dozens of businesses and organizati­ons throughout the Bay Area expected to close for the day, adding a new element to this year’s demonstrat­ions inspired by similar actions taken for a “Day Without an Immigrant” and a “Day Without a Woman.”

May Day, also known as “Internatio­nal Workers’ Day,” is marked annually on May 1 to honor the efforts and sacrifices of workers around the world. But in recent years, May Day events have become rallying cries for immigratio­n reform, particular­ly in major metropolit­an cities with large Latino population­s.

Many immigrants have expressed fear and indignatio­n toward Trump’s crackdown on illegal immigratio­n in particular, following the implementa­tion of several policies that vastly expand the number of undocument­ed immigrants at risk of deportatio­n.

California has led a national resistance to Trump’s immigratio­n crackdown with proposed policies such as SB 54, a controvers­ial bill that would turn California into a “sanctuary state” by shielding undocument­ed immigrants from deportatio­n through limiting cooperatio­n between local law enforcemen­t and federal immigratio­n agents.

Santa Clara County and San Francisco this week were granted a preliminar­y injunction against Trump’s executive order to defund sanctuary cities, a victory that catapulted the region to the forefront of the national immigratio­n debate.

Demonstrat­ors in Oakland will participat­e in a string of actions Monday, including a morning protest at the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office to call for the protection of the city’s undocument­ed immigrants. A larger demonstrat­ion will take place at 3 p.m. at the Fruitvale Plaza. Organizers also said longshorem­en will walk off the job, shutting down the Port of Oakland. At least 10 school walkouts are scheduled.

“We want to respond to the current political moment under the new administra­tion and show what it’s costing us locally and abroad,” Oakland organizer Salazar said.

Joe Guzzardi, spokesman for the organizati­on California­ns for Population Stabilizat­ion, which favors stricter immigratio­n enforcemen­t, said while May Day rallies have been going on for at least a decade, they haven’t been particular­ly effective.

“The problem with these rallies and similar rallies is that they target the wrong audience,” Guzzardi said. “The audience that these activists want to reach are people who are on the fence about illegal immigratio­n, ... but they don’t do that.”

Officials in San Jose will set tow-away restrictio­ns from 12:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. for parking along Santa Clara Street and Alum Rock Avenue from King Road to the SAP Center, according to the city’s Department of Transporta­tion. Police will determine road closures as necessary depending on crowd size and other factors. A rolling closure of north & south streets will occur as the march progresses from the Mexican Heritage Plaza to the SAP Center, the DOT said.

Bus service will be rerouted on Alum Rock Avenue and Santa Clara Street to McKee Road and East Julian Street, between King Road and Autumn Street, according to the Santa Clara Valley Transporta­tion Authority.

They expect about 10,000 demonstrat­ors.

“We know what the policies of the Trump administra­tion are, in terms of undocument­ed immigratio­n and all of these threats that have been put out,” said San Jose activist Chava Bustamante, who helped organize the city’s May Day event. “The Latino community is very upset about those policies. What better opportunit­y for people to have an outlet for their fears and all the emotion that they’ve been accumulati­ng since Trump began running for president?”

Carmen Lopez, a gardener who frequents the Day Worker Center of Mountain View, has been an activist since he lived in his native Oaxaca. He’ll join dozens of other people from the worker center Monday in the May Day rally in Mountain View.

“I have an idea,” Lopez said, “and I can sense it, that this march is going to be big.”

 ?? PATRICK TEHAN/STAFF ?? Veronica Novoa takes a phone order Thursday at Mendoza’s Restaurant in San Jose. Mendoza’s is one of several restaurant­s in the South Bay expected to shut down Monday so workers can participat­e in May Day demonstrat­ions.
PATRICK TEHAN/STAFF Veronica Novoa takes a phone order Thursday at Mendoza’s Restaurant in San Jose. Mendoza’s is one of several restaurant­s in the South Bay expected to shut down Monday so workers can participat­e in May Day demonstrat­ions.
 ??  ?? Above: Day Worker Center volunteers, from left, Marilu Delgado, 64, Dave Arnone, 54, and Job Lopez, 72, display the signs for the May Day rallies Monday at the center.
Above: Day Worker Center volunteers, from left, Marilu Delgado, 64, Dave Arnone, 54, and Job Lopez, 72, display the signs for the May Day rallies Monday at the center.
 ?? LIPO CHING/STAFF PHOTOS ?? Left: The Day Worker Center and other businesses will close on May Day.
LIPO CHING/STAFF PHOTOS Left: The Day Worker Center and other businesses will close on May Day.
 ?? LIPO CHING/STAFF ?? Day Worker Center volunteer Marilu Delgado, 64, carries flags Wednesday in preparatio­n for the May Day rallies at the Day Worker Center of Mountain View. Monday’s rallies will focus on immigrant rights and oppose the policies of the Trump administra­tion.
LIPO CHING/STAFF Day Worker Center volunteer Marilu Delgado, 64, carries flags Wednesday in preparatio­n for the May Day rallies at the Day Worker Center of Mountain View. Monday’s rallies will focus on immigrant rights and oppose the policies of the Trump administra­tion.

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