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Work Dries Up for Day Laborers

By Peter Costantini, IPS News. Posted December 24, 2008.


When the bubble began to deflate, day laborers were among the first and hardest-hit casualties.

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Outside a Home Depot store, it's a typical December morning in Seattle: cool and gray with a light sprinkle falling. At 7:30, about 50 men wait at the entrances to the parking lot. Most wear jackets, jeans and work shoes, and some carry day packs with tools, water and lunch. They stand silently with hands in pockets, alone or in knots of three or four, baseball caps or sweatshirt hoods deployed against the chilly mist.

Occasionally someone lights up a cigarette; here and there a conversation unfolds in Spanish. A young man with a ponytail and his sleeves rolled up shoots the breeze with another, gesticulating with both hands and pacing. They all scan the street for approaching cars and trucks.

Three hours later, around 10:30, a crew-cab pickup truck finally pulls up. A stampede of men engulfs it, shouting and jockeying for position. The driver points to four, who jump into the cab. Others try to squeeze in the door behind them, and the new hires have to fend them off to close it. As the truck drives off, the others retreat back to the sidewalk, a few grumbling, most silent.

A young man from Chihuahua jokes: "You have to be fast and strong to get a job here." Lately, he says, only two or three vehicles are stopping to hire people on an average day. Most hire only one or two workers.

Until recently he had a regular job with a small contractor two to three days a week, but he was laid off. "The whole country is like a gigantic hospital," he says, full of people with problems. When he can afford bus fare, he'd like to go back home to Mexico and his family to live.

The transaction around the pickup truck is the signature of an informal but high-profile marketplace that opens for business every morning outside home-improvement, paint, gardening and equipment-rental stores across the United States.

The resulting work is dispersed among neighbourhoods and job sites: a crew laying down roofing on a new condominium development, a couple of workers mowing a lawn, laborers helping to pour a concrete retaining wall.

The cheapness and productiveness of day laborers has kept many homeowners, as well as residential construction and gardening contractors, coming back for more over decades. And it has reduced the cost of living for millions.

Although day labor markets have existed in the United States for at least 170 years, their recent boom has been partly a response to the housing bubble of the past decade, fueled by an increase in immigration from Mesoamerica. The plentiful supply of cheap labor, in turn, has helped to lower costs and drive increased housing construction.

When the bubble began to deflate, day laborers were among the first and hardest-hit casualties. "Day labor is where the rubber meets the road in the economic downturn," observed Chris Newman, legal director of the National Day laborer Organising Network, a consortium of support organisations across the country.

As residential construction and discretionary income flat-lined, most network members reported sharp drops in jobs, beginning a year ago and accelerating this fall.

"We're having people losing their houses, people not investing in their homes. So that's having a huge impact on the day laborer population nationwide," said Veronica Federovsky, NDLON West Coast coordinator. She estimates that total day labor hours could be down 60 percent from a year ago: not only is the number of jobs reduced, but remaining jobs tend to last only a day or two rather than several days or weeks.


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View:
Good riddance
Posted by: eric hoffer on Dec 25, 2008 1:01 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the cards are played right we will have the border secured by the time the economy upswings again. Then those jobs can go to Americans who need them.

It is a fascist concept to say the most important thing is home owners and contractors wallets.

What real benefit has been gained by building all these houses on the cheap? Ghost town strip developments? What if houses were built with American labor? There might be less of them but at least the money would have gone to the workers and the American economy and not the contractors. The development would have been slower and more in line with demand rather than explosive and deflationary. But instead we have a bubble solely based on maximized profit.

And how is it sustainable for the illegals? They come to the U.S. to earn the equivalent, in their country, of 50 bucks an hour so their family can build a house etc. Just so it can dry up in a bust and they can go home to the same conditions they left their communities in?

And why is it okay for Americans to be out of work but we should cry when Hispanics can't find a job? Do they deserve the work more than Americans?

I'd wager the same people who decry NAFTA, and I don't like it either, are the same people who support illegal workers while flying the red flag. But it's the same thing just in the other direction. NAFTA guts their ability to sell their agricultural products internationally because of U.S. subsides but their cheap labor is what guts the American laborers ability to hold a decent paying job. The fascists win on both sides and the communists get to expunge their white guilt and tell themselves that maybe, just maybe, the brown people like them now.

Who losses? Americans. Americans of every color and ethnic background who aren't fortunate enough to have a college education and aren't satisfied with a part time waitstaff position and a bicycle made of scrap parts.

Good riddance and boo hoo. Maybe next time you can shed a tear for the unemployed American worker.

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» RE: Good riddance Posted by: boatman2
The most desperate amongst us are hit the hardest
Posted by: paintchips on Dec 26, 2008 8:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Day laborers are the poorest and most desperate population in our population yet they're pitiful existence is more than they had in their home countries. They put up with hateful people who use their labor yet demonize and exploit them yet profit off the laborer's backs. We need an overhaul of our economic policies and need more worker protections. Starting to protect the most vulnerable amongst us( day laborers) is a good start to increase everyone's stability and working conditions.

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