Los Angeles Times

Invisible workers

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Re “Desired for their labor, rejected as neighbors,” June 4

Plaudits to The Times for two deeply moving reports on undocument­ed immigrant workers in our state.

Last week, one article focused on a 37-year-old Mexican woman who spent nearly two decades living and working in the Los Angeles area. Yet she suffered continual anxiety — and invidious wage discrimina­tion — due to her undocument­ed status, leading her to “self-deport” to Tijuana.

More recently, you reported on the Central Coast’s large immigrant field-worker population. Local agricultur­al and business interests welcome these laborers, provided they show up for work but live out of sight, removed from polite society.

This piece made me recall driving by an expansive strawberry farm recently. There I saw scores of workers in constant motion, doing the tiring, repetitive stoop labor that virtually no U.S. citizen will do.

The scene reminded me of depictions of 19th century slaves toiling in southern cotton fields. One difference: The chains of bondage aren’t visible today. David Schaffer Santa Monica

This article on migrant farm workers having difficulty finding decent housing reminds me of Malibu declaring itself a so-called sanctuary city earlier this year. Some residents said the people who clean their houses and watch their children deserved to be treated well.

Does this concern make them humanitari­ans? It doesn’t matter, because the expensive housing in Malibu means illegal immigrants cannot afford to live there. Yachiyo Haney

Canoga Park

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? GREG FRANCE, owner of Mar Vista Berry, inspects the strawberri­es picked by local workers.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times GREG FRANCE, owner of Mar Vista Berry, inspects the strawberri­es picked by local workers.

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