The Reporter (Vacaville)

An immigrant’s struggles to survive in Vegas

- By Tim Sullivan

LAS VEGAS » The casino has been closed for months. The hotel rooms are empty. Out front, the three-story sign that once beckoned to gamblers with $1.99 margaritas now advertises a food bank in the parking lot every Thursday.

“8 a.m. until all food is distribute­d,” says the sign at the Fiesta Henderson.

It wasn’t supposed to be like this in America.

“I came here to conquer the United States, to say ‘ This is the place where I want to be, where I’ll build my empire,’” says Norma Flores, a Mexican immigrant who spent two decades working as a waitress at the Fiesta before COVID-19 descended and she lost her job.

Right now, her empire is a concrete block house crowded with six grandchild­ren, most of them doing school online. She dreads when she overhears a teacher asking what students had for their lunches and snacks. She rarely has enough food for both.

To be an immigrant in Las Vegas is to see the coronaviru­s economy at its worst.

Visitor numbers

Visitors to the area plummeted by more than 90 percent in a little over a month as the pandemic spread. The state’s unemployme­nt rocketed to 28 percent, the worst in the nation and a level not seen even during the Great Depression. Every day, thousands of cars lined up at emergency food distributi­on centers, the lines stretching for block after block, past pawn shops and casinos and law offices.

Across the U. S., immigrant workers suffered disproport­ionately after COVID-19 struck. But their outsized presence in Las Vegas’ hospitalit­y industry, where they form the working-class backbone of countless hotels, casinos and restaurant­s, meant a

special kind of devastatio­n.

At night, Flores often lies awake, worrying about paying the rent, buying gas, getting enough food. Like millions of other people across the U.S., her unemployme­nt benefits run out the day after Christmas. She’s terrified her family could end up homeless.

“I’m scared I might wake up tomorrow and I won’t have anything,” she says, sitting outside her little house.

A block away, traffic rumbled past on the sixlane road that cuts through town. “I’m scared to be there, you know?”

Three of us — a reporter, a photograph­er and a videograph­er — came to Vegas on The Associated Press’ road trip across America, a journey that has taken us to nearly a dozen states, talking to people who are wrestling with the seismic shifts of 2020. A single line in a newspaper article brought us here: More than half the members of Las Vegas’ powerful Culinary Workers Union were still unemployed more than eight months into the pandemic. Most of its members are racial minorities or immigrants.

For decades, the working- class neighborho­ods that circle Las Vegas called out to foreigners. Beckoned by an ever-growing city with a seemingly endless appetite for workers, they came from Ethiopia and India and the Philip

pines and dozens of other countries. But they mostly came from Latin America, especially Mexico.

They changed Las Vegas, and Nevada.

One in five of the state’s residents are immigrants, according to the American Immigratio­n Council, and one in six are native-born citizens with at least one immigrant parent.

Armies of unemployed

Now those working-class immigrant neighborho­ods, where languages spill over one another in countless dirt yards, are home to armies of unemployed housekeepe­rs and cocktail waitresses and small business owners.

There’s the Filipino hairdresse­r let go by his salon and desperate for money to get his diabetes medicine, and the Cambodian who had to shut down his little restaurant. There’s the Honduran housekeepe­r running out of money. There’s Olimka Luna, who came from a small Mexican city and spent 20 years in a Las Vegas casino, first as a dishwasher and then as a cook, before being laid off in March and fired in May. Today, her focus is purely on her house, and the $1,300 monthly mortgage payment.

“We are not going to lose our house,” she says. Then she repeats herself: “We are strong and we are not going to lose it.”

A nd there’s Norma

Flores. Flores, 54, hasn’t worked since March, when Nevada’s casinos were ordered closed as the pandemic spread. While many casinos reopened in June, hers did not. She gets $322 a week in unemployme­nt after taxes, but is helping support a son, a daughter and six grandchild­ren who moved in with her as the state’s economy collapsed.

Her life has become an ongoing battle with the mathematic­s of personal finance for the impoverish­ed. Is there enough money for the $831 rent? How late will the landlord allow her to be? How much food is left in the refrigerat­or? Can she afford some sort of treat for the kids?

She calculates to the dollar how much money she has left until the next check arrives.

But sometimes, her heart makes that calculatio­n.

On a chilly autumn afternoon, as Flores stands at a supermarke­t cash register, the cashier asks if she wanted to donate to a food bank run out of a nearby church.

“Not today,” Flores said. She reaches into her big red purse, pulls a handful of notes, and carefully counts out $17 for her groceries. Then she looks at what she has left — and hands the cashier $1 for the food bank.

It’s a kind of payback — she often gets help from that charity.

“I’m going to help them, because other people need them too,” she says.

Las Vegas sells itself on fantasies of wealth, luxury and sex, and even the most cynical first-time visitor can come here expecting at least a hint of James Bond playing baccarat in Monte Carlo.

Vegas feels more like a mixture of endless mall and Disney-ish resort set to the music of amplified slot machines. Gamblers wear jeans and shorts, not tuxedoes.

A rumpled reporter fits right in.

 ?? WONG MAYE-E — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Casinos and other businesses are seen reflected in the glass walls of an overpass along the Las Vegas Strip.
WONG MAYE-E — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Casinos and other businesses are seen reflected in the glass walls of an overpass along the Las Vegas Strip.

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