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Econopocalypse: Immigrant Housecleaners in Freefall

By Leslie Casimir, New America Media. Posted April 16, 2009.


Domestic workers are the first to be let go as professionals tighten their household budgets in this recession.
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Since losing four of her seven cleaning jobs this year, housekeeper Veronica Nieto has started looking through trash -- plucking out recyclable cans and bottles for cash to make the rent. The mother of three rarely shops for groceries anymore. Instead, she visits three food banks for staples such as rice, beans, and onions. She stopped her cable service.

“When I think about this situation, my back hurts, my head hurts,” said Nieto, 36, one of thousands of domestic workers, who said that since the economy tanked, her life has been in a freefall. “I never thought this would happen to me.”

She isn’t alone. A record 5.84 million people now are collecting unemployment benefits, an unprecedented figure amid the worst economic crisis to hit the United States since the Depression.

But Nieto, a San Francisco resident of nine years and other domestic workers who clean homes for a living, are not included in this staggering figure. An undocumented immigrant, Nieto has toiled in the shadows of the underground economy, performing the backbreaking work of scrubbing toilets and floors. She reckons she will have to suffer the consequences of unemployment in the dark, as well.

“What can I do?” she asked.

Her husband, also undocumented and an unemployed construction laborer, is worse off. Depressed, he sits at home and watches TV, described Nieto, who is more concerned about her husband’s despondent condition than her own predicament.

“I have never seen him like this,” said Nieto, her eyes tearing up. “He has always been the one who sustained the household. He said if we continue like this, we’re going to have to leave for Mexico.”

Layoffs of housecleaners have skyrocketed in recent months. As professionals continue to lose their jobs and tighten their household budgets, maids are the first ones to be let go, said Altagracia Garcia, an organizer with the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles.

“It’s been a domino effect,” Garcia said. “Household workers are disposable right now.”

From New York to San Francisco, the complaints that there are no jobs have been coming in from this often silent and invisible workforce – estimated in the hundreds of thousands in New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago alone. Cleaning homes is one of the most lucrative jobs for an immigrant woman with limited English-speaking skills, said Andrea Cristina Mercado, the lead organizer of Mujeres Unidas y Activas, a grassroots Latina organization in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Even before the recession hit, housecleaners endured some of the lowest wages in the country. Now, some say they are working for almost nothing.

Among the half-dozen women interviewed, many say they are scrambling to avoid evictions, with some moving in with friends and others squatting in foreclosed homes. Many women say they are selling homemade tamales and other handicrafts on the street to make ends meet and relying on their families and churches for donated clothes, emergency cash and food.

Jill Shenker, lead organizer at the San Francisco Day Labor Program Women's Collective of La Raza Centro Legal, said many women have stopped complaining about workplace abuses altogether because they now fear losing the few jobs that are out there.

“One woman is getting paid $70 for 10 hours of work -- a clear violation of minimum wage,” Shenker said. “But people are now willing to take those jobs because the recession has made a bad situation worse.”

Silvia Medina, 38, who lives in Brooklyn, is one of the housekeepers who managed to escape unemployment by working more hours for less pay. She used to earn $120 for doing the laundry, ironing, and cleaning for a family of seven twice a week. Now that same household pays her $70, she said. And she accepts it.

“This work is so undervalued,” said Medina, a single mom of two. “But I know about the soup kitchens in the churches that give out free food. I go to those places now to complete my meals.”

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Undocumented? Oh, you mean Illegal.
Posted by: Honky The Antichrist on Apr 16, 2009 10:02 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One woman is getting paid $70 for 10 hours of work -- a clear violation of minimum wage

Should I care? Her being in this country is a clear violation of immigration laws.

This work is so undervalued

It is not undervalued it’s just that a retard could do that work. When I was a life guard at the YMCA we had a mentally challenged janitor. He was 35 years old and would ask me to count his change and tell him what he could get from the vending machine.

GET OUT

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Undocumented is a nice word for Criminal
Posted by: johnwinthrop on Apr 17, 2009 5:36 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A nice term for ILLEGAL. Americans will clean their own homes or pay wages sufficient to entice Americans to clean houses. And many Americans do clean houses. A shock I'm sure to the academic goody goodies who post here. Cleaning is honorable work and Americans need work. Americans. What a quaint term. Did you know that most people in the world think that the people in their country are superior to people in other countries. Is that racist? NO. Is that NORMAL? YES.

Get out of my country, trespasser. The day of Obama will pass. And when it does, trespassers had best scoot back over the border. Because normal people, not the weird Obama family and their friends like the Kennedys, think that trespassers should be shot or put in jail.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

RE: LEAVE, Veronica and hubby and 3 anchors, LEAVE!!!
Posted by: RedAaron on Apr 20, 2009 2:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Pseudonymous chauvinist bigot "ICEManCometh" writes:

Get out of my [sic!] country you lawbreakers and go back and suck the resources out of your own country. Reform your home country so more like you don't come here anymore!

The resources of their countries are being and have been sucked out for centuries by AmeriKKKans and Europeans, including the mostly European-descended ruling landlord-capitalist parasites of those countries. Their countries can't be reformed; their rulers have to be overthrown, and their land and resources taken back from the domestic and, especially, foreign bloodsuckers who now claim to "own" them.

When the United Snakes sends its military to protect those ruling scum from the people trying to take back their countries, which side will you be on, Mr. Cometh?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Professionals and domestic servants? What world do YOU live in?
Posted by: rickiey on Apr 21, 2009 1:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Professionals don't have domestic servants. Professionals are people who actually do work and produce things. Overpaid Executives, have domestic servants.

And seriously, you want us to consider it a bad thing that the income of overpaid executives is coming down so low that they can't have servants?

Seriously?

How about looking at a the bigger picture, ya know, creating jobs that don't have the demeaning stature of "servant"?

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DAD77
Posted by: DAD77 on Apr 24, 2009 1:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I was growing up in the US, it was very important to get an education, get a decent job, save money, try to buy a house BEFORE having children. Americans put off having children until later in life and had less children to give their children a better standard of living. I didn't have my first child until I was 33, because I wanted better future for him than I had grown up with.

I think it is irresponsible to come go to a foreign county illegally, then have three children like the lady in this article did. Similarly for the single mother of two. People have choices; many choose the easy, fast way rather than the difficult, time consuming, and lawful way.

I am writing this because I am fed up with the many "sympathy" articles written for those who chose the skirt the law. What about the over population of the world? What about self responsibility?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Thanks. Good comments
Posted by: shanbrom@aol.com on Apr 27, 2009 12:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's put an end to our apartheid system: using Mexico, chiefly, as our bantustan for cheap labor.
Controlling the high levels of immigration throws a wrench in a system that bids down wages at all levels and makes it necessary for both parents to work and then to hire servants/slaves at half a living wage to manage their households.
Start cleaning your own toilets and with the money you save set up a scholarship fund in Mexico tol educate girls, or buy a remote town a solar array and some computers, or a solar pump for clean water.
Stop emoting and start thinking these things through, Alternet. Stop being stooges of the American power structure.

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