US Employees Terrified of ICE Raids Are Failing to Show Up at Work - High-profile immigration raids are scaring off workers and leaving employers unsure of how they’ll manage without them.

Employees Terrified of ICE Raids Are Failing to Show Up at Work
Bloomberg (archive.ph)
By Alicia A. Caldwell, Maxwell Adler, and Michael Smith
2025-06-19 21:00:39GMT

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US farms already struggling to find enough crop hands are finding it even harder amid the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. Photographer: Ivan Kashinsky/Bloomberg

The Los Angeles garment district is emptied out. Texas dairy farmers say workers aren’t showing up to milk cows. An Idaho onion grower already struggling to find enough crop hands says his labor supply is only getting worse.

And in Ventura, California, Deputy Mayor Doug Halter said that after nearby immigration raids targeted day laborers outside of Home Depots, all the Latinos seemed to have disappeared from one of the retailer’s outposts near him. Walking through the aisles the other day, from what he could tell, there were only White people. “If you know this area, you’ll know that is abnormal.”

The US labor landscape is being roiled as high-profile workplace raids by immigration agents kitted out in military gear scare off workers who lack permission to be in the country and leave employers unsure of how they’ll manage without them. Unauthorized immigrants make up an estimated 5% of the US workforce, with the concentration particularly high in construction, food processing and other areas that face chronic labor shortages.

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Immigration raids targeting day laborers outside Home Depots have sparked Los Angeles protests over increasingly aggressive ICE tactics.Photographer: Patrick T. Fallon/AFP/Getty Images

As President Donald Trump seeks to fulfill a campaign pledge to undertake the largest deportation operation in history, the economic fallout looms. The US workforce shrank in May, partly because of a decline in the number of foreign-born workers. In California—the most-populous state and home to a particularly large share of immigrants—mass deportations could wipe out $275 billion in economic output, slash tax revenue by as much as $23 billion annually and severely disrupt industries like construction and agriculture, according to a report this week by the Bay Area Council Economic Institute and University of California at Merced.

“If we deported everyone here that’s undocumented and working on farms, in fields, we would starve to death,” said Shay Myers, who runs Parma, Idaho-based Owyhee Produce, one of America’s largest onion farms.

Every year, Myers needs to secure about 90 farm hands with federal guest-worker visas, called H-2A, from Mexico and elsewhere to tend to 10,000 acres (4,000 hectares) in Idaho and Oregon. But getting enough laborers has become such a headache that he’s had to give up planting some crops.

“We will not feed our people in this country without these workers, plain and simple,” he said.

US farms run on an army of workers to grow crops, and the Department of Agriculture estimates more than 40% are undocumented. Owners and workers have been whipsawed as they try to decipher the Trump administration’s stance toward the agriculture industry. Last week, the president seemed to offer a reprieve by suggesting workplace raids should avoid farms, food processors, hotels and restaurants. But just a few days later, the administration’s stance abruptly shifted, with the Department of Homeland Security reaffirming agents should resume going after everyone in the country without permission regardless of where they work.

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US Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins.Photographer: Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Such policy volatility is typical of the Trump administration—the president’s plan for tariffs have also been notably unstable—and likely reflects competing views within the White House. While hardliners such as adviser Stephen Miller have pushed for an aggressive deportation program, setting a target of at least 3,000 arrests a day, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins has appeared sympathetic to business concerns about labor shortages, according to people familiar with White House deliberations who asked not to be identified discussing internal debates.

Ignore the noise from the fake news media and the grifters trying to divide us.

I fully support President Trump’s America First immigration agenda as stated in his campaign, starting with strong border security and deportations of EVERY illegal alien. This agenda is essential to…

— Brooke Rollins (@BrookeLRollins) June 15, 2025

Trump “realized that there really could be a big problem if they just rounded them all up and kicked them all out,” said Edward Ring, the head of the conservative think tank California Policy Center, who met with the president in January but says he doesn’t have direct knowledge of any policy discussions. “Trump got the word on that, and he doesn’t want to destroy a whole industry.”

Trump also is confronting fierce pushback to his deportation push, and particularly the heavy handed tactics often employed and the indiscriminate nature of the roundups. Over the weekend, protesters rallied in hundreds of US cities to denounce what they said were the president’s authoritarian tendencies. Days earlier, demonstrations in LA, sparked by increasingly aggressive raids from Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, escalated following his decision to deploy National Guard troops and Marines to help quell violence.

In downtown LA’s Fashion District, where ICE raids helped spur the protests, mills usually filled with the buzz of sewing machines were silent, the shops shut down for lack of workers. Many showrooms that cater to wholesale buyers are padlocked. The LA Fashion District Business Improvement District reported a 40% drop in casual visits to the area since a high-profile raid on June 6, while attendance by employees declined almost 24%.

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People gather in front of Ambiance Apparel after several employees were taken into custody by federal agents in the Fashion District in downtown Los Angeles, on June 6.Photographer: Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images

“The President has been incredibly clear. There will be no safe spaces for industries who harbor violent criminals or purposely try to undermine ICE’s efforts,” Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for DHS, said in emailed response to questions Wednesday. “Worksite enforcement remains a cornerstone of our efforts to safeguard public safety, national security and economic stability.”

Texas state Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller says that while some Texas dairy farms have tried to use technology to lessen dependence on manual labor, the immigration crackdown has still hit hard. Some undocumented workers hoping to avoid ICE agents have stopped coming to work and even some legal workers are staying away for fear that they will be detained or questioned, he said.

“Those cows, they have to be milked every eight hours, so if milkhands are gone, what are you going to do?” Miller said. “It’s sheer panic.”

Trump has previously tried to shield the agricultural industry from economic pain, steering billions of dollars in federal aid to farmers in his first term, mainly to offset losses from his trade war with China. During the pandemic, he designated farm workers as essential and allowed some flexibility around visa rules, recognizing their importance to the nation's food supply chain.

Speaking to reporters at the White House on Wednesday, he again sounded a note of sympathy for farmers while emphasizing the need for more deportations. “Now, look, we have to take care of our farmers. We have to take care of people that run leisure hotels,” he said. “But most importantly, we have to get the criminals out of our country.”

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The 5.5 million immigrants who joined the labor force since 2020 have been behind most of the job creation in the US, but Trump has framed the crackdown as a matter of restoring public safety and protecting American jobs. While some of his tactics have drawn criticism, immigration enforcement still holds broad support. A Pew Research Center poll from March found that more than 80% of respondents believe at least some people who are in the US illegally, especially those with criminal records, should be deported.

ICE reported this month that it was averaging more than 1,600 daily apprehensions, a faster pace from an average of 670 arrests a day between when Trump took office Jan. 20 and May. It’s also a roughly 450% increase over typical numbers during former President Joe Biden’s last year in office. ICE doesn't publish daily arrest figures and didn't respond to a request to provide updated data when contacted by Bloomberg.

Tom Homan, Trump’s border czar, said he hasn’t spoken to the president about his recent views on the agriculture and hotel industries, while acknowledging tensions between labor demands and immigration policy. “I have said for a long time, Congress needs to make some changes. We need a workforce to do that type of work, then create a legal pathway,” Homan told The Daily podcast in an episode released Thursday, referencing concerns from hotels and farmers. “The president understands there’s a broken system here, but it doesn’t mean we just ignore the law.” Homan said workplace raids are still happening, though agents are prioritizing the most serious criminals.

Sid Miller, Myers and others involved in the agriculture industry have said that easing the path for temporary visas for farm workers offer a way to address concerns about illegal immigration while maintaining the labor force.

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Farmers work in a field in Camarillo, California, on June 17.Photographer: Ivan Kashinsky/Bloomberg

It’s onerous to secure legal guest workers, taking 90 days or more, growers say. A farm must first ask the US Labor Department to certify the need for workers they can’t find in America. Then, the farm has to find foreign workers, pay to bring them to the US, and cover housing and meals. It adds up to $21,250 per H-2A worker for 125 days of harvest work, according to Philip Martin, a professor at the University of California at Davis.

“People don’t really understand where their food comes from and what it takes to get their food to them,” said Myers, a third-generation farmer. He believes that Congress should overhaul US immigration policy to give law-abiding undocumented farm workers a pathway to legal immigration status.

Katelyn Eames, who runs Burg’s Corner, a peach farm in Stonewall, Texas, says she’s dependent on workers with temporary visas. The program requires her to advertise jobs to US citizens first, but in the years she’s been working at the farm, no Americans have ever applied. The work requires people willing to pick peaches in the brutally hot central Texas summers, where temperatures routinely exceed 100 degrees F (38 C).

“If it weren’t for them, there would be no peaches,” Eames said. “If you think a US citizen wanted to pick 500 acres of my dad’s peaches in the last 60 years, you would be sadly mistaken.”

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Industry lobbyists also are mobilizing. The Kansas Livestock Association’s lobbyists are “getting inside the room” at the White House by focusing on Rollins, calling for giving law-abiding undocumented workers to be given a path to legal status because there aren't enough people in America to staff all the farms, ranches and meat processing plants, according to Chief Executive Officer Matt Teagarden. “We can use imported workers in our food production, or we can import food,” he said. “And, from a national security, food security standpoint, we don't want to import food.”

The Meat Institute, which represents producers including JBS NV and Tyson Foods Inc., last week urged the Trump administration to include meat and poultry packers and processors in efforts to improve agriculture worker programs. Richard Kreps, chair of American Pistachio Growers, said his trade group plans to use Trump’s immigration crackdown to push for a guest worker program for farm workers, similar to the Bracero Program, a midcentury effort that allowed millions of Mexican men to work in US agriculture.

The American Hotel & Lodging Association, a trade group, has held “numerous meetings with administration officials to convey our acute workforce shortage challenges,” CEO Rosanna Maietta said in an email.

About 70 miles northwest of Los Angeles, in Ventura County, the strawberry and Brussels sprout harvests are in full swing. Days after high-profile immigration raids that targeted farm workers and produced videos of agents chasing men through fields, workers are mostly back. This time of year means lots of steady work, and even workers apprehensive about ICE raids were willing to take the risk. Workers asked passing strangers to identify themselves, nervous about seeing a camera or someone peering into fields through chain link fences.

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Farmworkers harvest Brussels sprouts at a farm in Oxnard, on June 17.Photographer: Ivan Kashinsky/Bloomberg

“Farm workers live from crisis to crisis,” said Roman Pinal, national vice president of the United Farm Workers, adding that field workers in Ventura county worked through smoke-filled days during the LA wildfires in January and immigration raids in the Central Valley that same month.

Carolina, a 29-year-old Mexican national who asked to be identified with a nickname to avoid antagonizing authorities, said she has been working in California’s strawberry fields since she arrived in the US as a 12-year-old. She worries that she will be targeted by Trump's crackdown even though she has a work permit that is good for the next four years.

“We’re not criminals,” Carolina said. “We are just trying to work, not cause problems.”

— With assistance from Eliyahu Kamisher, Joe Lovinger, Skylar Woodhouse, Julie Fine, Myles Miller, Jennifer A Dlouhy, John Gittelsohn, Augusta Saraiva, Gerson Freitas Jr, Michael Hirtzer, Erin Ailworth, Patrick Clark, and Divya Balji
 
“We can use imported workers in our food production, or we can import food,”
“We will not feed our people in this country without these workers, plain and simple,” he said.
The United States is the largest exporter of food in the world. The United States can feed every mouth in the country and still export tens of millions of tons of food a year if necessary. Miss me with your crying that you can't find illegal aliens to pay 1/3 of what legal farm workers make
 
Some Iowan farmers used to hire local teens and college students to pick their corn not all that long ago. It was a good way for kids to work for a few weeks for decent (at the time) wages, and they were young and energetic enough to handle the job.

I also know someone who went on some sort of grape picking program in Italy during college. They'd pick grapes for a few weeks, earn a little money and then backpack around Europe.
Good luck with that from inflation. Actual question, wouldn’t prices just go up? How come that argument doesn’t fly for increasing minimum wage for McDonald’s?
 
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Good luck with that from inflation. Actual question, wouldn’t prices just go up? How come that argument doesn’t fly for increasing minimum wage for McDonald’s?
Those huge ebil agricorporations are the ones paying decent wages by investing in greater efficiency and productivity to lower non-labor costs. They keep their wholesale prices low by investing in productivity at scale, so they can make small profit on each bushel or barrel or whatever sold at wholesale = huge profits by selling huge numbers of bushels or barrels or whatever. The independent farmer has to hire illegals to keep his wholesale prices low to compete. What is more important, the independent farmer staying in business, or stopping the independent farmer's contribution to the shitskinification of the United States? The answer is easy
 
Of all the listed industries, construction is the one where it's extremely obvious the bosses are overpaid and could obviously and immediately pay people what they're worth. They'd rather be boat owners and Tesla collectors than spread the wealth around though.
One of my friends from highschool has worked in the same construction crew since graduation. All the workers are legal. They get all kinds of work, he has a nice middle class house, goes on vacation twice a year (this is more work slows down in winter so he has time to go on another vacation then than anything else), two cars, a boat, ATV, all the consoomer toys. Construction is not insanely expensive in my neck of the woods. His boss is as rich as the next successful ~25 employee business owner. But then again we don't live in an area that's been fucked by Democrats for 75 years so the market isn't distorted to the point where only illegal labor is competitive. Democrats made the situation where their cost of living is already ridiculous, and would be even more so if they didn't have huge amounts of illegal labor. They can live with the consequences
 
All this is telling me is that wages for laborers ought to be much, much, much higher.

The gap between the office worker and the construction worker might be nothing, or even in favor of the construction worker.

The gap between the barista and the fruit picker might be nothing, or even in favor of the fruit picker.

I always wondered why harder/more dangerous jobs didn’t pay more. Now we know: slave labor.

How much of the “income inequality” that the left constantly drones on about is actually just importing SCABS (illegal immigrants) to undermine wages?
 
I always wondered why harder/more dangerous jobs didn’t pay more. Now we know: slave labor.
They do pay more, but they often come with requirements, like fluent English; because no one has time to fucking learn a second language or call the translator when you're working an oil rig, under water welding, or just manning a crab boat in the Arctic Circle. Picking produce and doing menial construction is what they do; while I'm sure the more competent ones get licensed as a plumber, electrician, and shit like that; a majority of them are basic day laborer who swing a hammer and hang drywall, and can't even do that shit to code half the time.
 
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(((They))) need to realize that they can’t totally maximize profits. (((They))) are going to have to sacrifice some money to pay legal citizens or immigrants with the proper visas a livable wage and provide them with proper working conditions.

Honest question: do you really believe that everyone hiring illegal immigrants is a Jew? That is beyond retarded.

The issue is that EVERYONE who can get away with it is hiring illegals. And if they don’t, they go out of business for being uncompetitive.

That’s why the government is the only one who can solve the issue. They HAVE to close the borders and deport people in order to level the playing field between the honest and the dishonest.
 
Honest question: do you really believe that everyone hiring illegal immigrants is a Jew? That is beyond retarded.
Of course not. But Jew greedy and bad and therefore funny to ((( ))) anyone acting greedily.

The issue is that EVERYONE who can get away with it is hiring illegals. And if they don’t, they go out of business for being uncompetitive.

That’s why the government is the only one who can solve the issue. They HAVE to close the borders and deport people in order to level the playing field between the honest and the dishonest.
Obviously, yes, the free market necessitates more and more competitive practices. But it can be argued that companies used to take more social responsibility and take better care of their workers. They wouldn’t necessarily go out of business, but it would eat into their profits, for sure, and they need to view it as a new non-negotiable cost in today’s business model for their industry.

I don’t expect them to change their behavior unless it is enforced by the government, though, I was moreso stating how they needed to view it in business terms.
 
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Of course not. But Jew greedy and bad and therefore funny to ((( ))) anyone acting greedily.


Obviously, yes, the free market necessitates more and more competitive practices. But it can be argued that companies used to take more social responsibility and take better care of their workers. They wouldn’t necessarily go out of business, but it would eat into their profits, for sure, and they need to view it as a new non-negotiable cost in today’s business model for their industry.

I don’t expect them to change their behavior unless it is enforced by the government, though, I was moreso stating how they needed to view it in business terms.

The issue is that the government has created a situation where basically anyone acting ethically will go out of business. There is actually a biblical prohibition against this in Leviticus: “don’t put a stumbling block in front of the blind”. Basically, it is a sin to set up the circumstances to induce others to sin.

Yes, it is immoral for individuals and businesses to hire illegals in order to pay lower wages. But ultimately the greatest culpability lies with the government, who created these circumstances (stumbling block) to begin with.
 
They'll try to tell you there's only something like 10 to 12 million in the entire country. Meanwhile there's an easy full million in Los Angeles by itself. The number is closer to 30 million plus.
Everyone who's come here since '65 and didn't previously qualify under the old rules is illegal. We were never asked, it was never put before us to vote on.
 
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From the Bay Area to San Diego, California restaurants are on edge over ICE raids
The Mercury News (archive.ph)
By Levi Sumagaysay and Lauren Hepler | CalMatters
2025-06-20 14:32:24GMT
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Brandon Mejia, center, shown at his 909Tacolandia pop-up, started the event after he said a 2023 hit-and-run car crash left him with severe nerve damage and unable to keep working as a chef. He shut down the events on the weekend of June 14-15, 2025, because his vendors fear LA-area immigration raids, and now he and the vendors are debating when to reopen. (Photo courtesy of Brandon Mejia)

Brandon Mejia usually spends his weekends conducting a symphony of vendors serving pupusas, huaraches and an array of tacos at his two weekly 909Tacolandia pop-up events.

Half food festival, half swap meet, the events draw 100-plus vendors a week in Pomona and San Bernardino. They offer a way to “legalize” street food — vendors get a reliable location, cities collect taxes and enforce health codes — while patrons enjoy delicacies from all over Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua. Spanglish music plays, people dance and kids flock to facepainting and pony rides.

But in the past week, that’s all come to a screeching halt. As the Trump administration ramps up immigration raids in California, some restaurants, worried about their workers or finding that customers are staying home more, are closing temporarily. Many street vendors are going into hiding, and some food festivals and farmers markets have been canceled.

Mejia called off all Tacolandia events last week. His mind raced about whether agents would come for his vendors as videos surfaced on social media of taqueros, farm workers and fruit vendors vanishing in immigration raids around LA and neighboring Ventura County.

“A lot of these vendors, their goal is to have restaurants. They want to follow the rules,” said Mejia, who was born and raised in San Bernardino in a family from Mexico City. But after conferring with vendors, they decided the risk was too high: “Some people have told me that their relatives have got taken, so I don’t want to be responsible for that.”

After a week of mass protests and more raids at farms, grocery stores and at least one swap meet, Mejia and many others remain on edge. Mejia said some small food businesses are getting desperate, trying to decide whether to risk reopening or stay closed while their own families grow hungry.

The disruptions come at a difficult time for California’s restaurant industry, which is already grappling with soaring costs for ingredients, labor, rent and regulatory requirements. In Los Angeles alone, more than 100 well-known restaurants closed last year, the Los Angeles TImes found — all before the immigration raids that industry leaders warn could further hamstring the industry.

In California, the food and restaurant industry employed about 1.42 million people as of April — a sizable workforce that is being affected regardless of the immigration status of its workers. That includes nearly 600,000 people who work for full-service restaurants.

Jot Condie, president of the California Restaurant Association, called immigrants “the lifeblood of our industry.”

Confusion over Trump orders​

President Donald Trump and his administration have sowed confusion: Late last week, the president posted the following on social media: “Our great Farmers and people in the Hotel and Leisure business have been stating that our very aggressive policy on immigration is taking very good, long time workers away from them, with those jobs being almost impossible to replace.” That led to reports that his administration would pause most raids on restaurants, farms and hotels.

This week, those exceptions were reversed.

“The President has been incredibly clear,” said Tricia McLaughlin, an assistant secretary for the Department of Homeland Security, in an emailed statement to CalMatters. “There will be no safe spaces for industries who harbor violent criminals or purposely try to undermine ICE’s efforts.” McLaughlin said “worksite enforcement remains a cornerstone of our efforts.”

When CalMatters asked whether worksite raids would target only those with criminal records, the agency did not respond.

“I’m following it step-by-step,” Mejia said of the administration’s announcements. “I fall under those categories — hospitality and restaurants. But the thing that scares me is he said he’s going to go to the biggest cities — LA, Chicago, New York. I don’t know what I’m going to do.”

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Restaurant workers watch protesters move through downtown as demonstrations continue in the city after a series of immigration raids began last Friday on June 10, 2025, in Los Angeles, California. Tensions in the city remain high after the Trump administration called in the National Guard and the Marines against the wishes of city leaders. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

A food-truck owner in the Pasadena area who has had to shut down said she has a hard time trusting what the president says.

“We feel like (Trump is) not being honest,” said Adriana Gomez Salazar, who was 4 years old when she came to the U.S. from Mexico and has been able to work legally for years without fear of deportation as a DACA recipient. The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, established under President Barack Obama, is facing legal challenges.

Salazar had to shut down her Altadena-based food truck, LA Cajun Seafood Boil, after the January fires. When she reopened, she said customers were scarce because the area needs to rebuild. She was not eligible for a Small Business Administration low-interest disaster loan because she’s a DACA recipient, something she said is frustrating because she is a taxpayer just trying to make a living.

Now, Salazar has had to shut down again to try to protect herself and her workers — and because many customers are staying home out of fear of the ICE raids. She is trying to bring in income from catering jobs and has started a GoFundMe to try to raise money not just for her but for an employee who is out of work now.

“I have no idea how long I’m gonna be shut down for,” she said. “Trump can say a lot of things (about pausing ICE raids) but he has also said he wants to do the biggest mass deportations in history.”

In the LA neighborhood of Wilmington, a farmers market also has closed down. “Due to increased ICE activity in Wilmington, many of our farmers are scared and have chosen not to attend… We do hope to one day reopen… but for now, we must step away,” according to a Monday post on the Wilmington Farmers Market’s Instagram page.

Similar stories and concerns have emerged up and down the state. San Diego restaurant Buona Forchetta was the site of a “traumatic raid,” the restaurant’s owners recently confirmed in a statement. They had to close for a couple of days.

In the Bay Area, restaurant owners and industry groups are anxious and bracing for possible impact on their workers and businesses.

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Buona Forchetta restaurant posted a message announcing all its San Diego and Orange County locations would be closed Monday and Tuesday after at least three workers were detained by immigration officers in a surprise raid Friday. People passing by the flowers and signs out front of the restaurant in South Park on 06.02.25, in San Diego, California. (Alejandro Tamayo / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

Owners educate workers about their rights​

An owner of a Mexican restaurant in the historically Latino Mission District in San Francisco, who requested anonymity over fears his restaurant and workers could be targeted by ICE, said he has gone over possible scenarios with his employees in case federal agents enter the restaurant.

He has a sign that clearly says “employees only” beyond a certain point. Beyond the sign, it’s not a public space so his employees are supposed to be safe there, he said.

His employees also know the agents need to show a warrant, and that they should check the name on the warrant. They also know to try to stop the agents verbally as well as to use hand gestures, so his security system’s cameras can pick it all up for possible evidence later.

His employees all had the necessary paperwork when they were hired, but he can’t be sure of their immigration status.

“I don’t want to assume anyone’s undocumented,” he said. “I have no reason to question them.”

He said all he can tell them is to be careful out there, especially now. “I told them I’m careful because I look very Mexican,” he said. “So know your rights when you’re out on the street.”

According to an estimate by the Migration Policy Institute, a liberal-leaning think tank, more than 250,000 undocumented immigrants in California worked in the accommodation and food services, arts, entertainment and recreation industries in 2019.

Condie said the California Restaurant Association is working with the National Restaurant Association to push for federal immigration reform, which includes providing pathways to legalization for those who are undocumented and creating a temporary worker visa program.

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ICE officers conduct an immigration raid at Buona Forchetta, an Italian restaurant, in the South Park neighborhood of San Diego on May 30, 2025. (Photo courtesy of Pedro Rios)

The Golden Gate Restaurant Association, which has about 800 industry members mostly in San Francisco, is focusing on disseminating information to try to quell some of the anxiety.

“This fear is really causing stress on families, workers, and also on customers,” said Laurie Thomas, the association’s executive director.

Besides the possible personal and financial toll on workers and owners as a direct result of the raids, she said protests against the raids could mean double trouble for restaurants, which have very tight margins: They have to prepare for the possibilities of a lull in business, violence and vandalism, too.

Thomas is tracking the changing directives coming from the Trump administration. “Until there is clarity regarding ongoing actions, there will continue to be a high degree of stress in our community,” she said.

Some California restaurant owners are remaining defiant — and open. In Long Beach, El Barrio Cantina chef and owner Ulises Pineda-Alfaro decided that his restaurant would offer the community a place to gather and take a break from doom-scrolling.

After a few calls to popular Mexican-owned liquor brands, he also came up with a way to give back to those on the frontline. For $13 last weekend, customers could get the restaurant’s taquitos de papa and either a margarita or a whiskey sour, with 100% of proceeds going to local immigrant rights group Órale.

“The hospitality industry, the backbone of it, is mainly made by immigrants,” Pineda- Alfaro said. “My dad was an immigrant until he got his citizenship. It hits close to home.”

By last Friday, an Instagram post announcing the deal had more than 50,000 views, and Pineda-Alfaro said about a dozen people were waiting outside when the restaurant opened for lunch that day — a welcome sight as other pockets of the city sat empty.

“I have seen some vendors and some other restaurants closing early or not opening at all,” he said. “We’re embedded in the community, hence our name. We’re going to remain open.”
 
Fucking GOOD! They should be in absolute terror. They should live in fear every second they remain on US soil illegally. And they should have good reason to be terrified: being relentlessly hunted down like the feral animals they are by federal authorities. They should be looking over their shoulders in fear that every American they bump into is pulling out their phone to call ICE and rat them out.

What should employers do about it? Give those jobs to Americans and pay them a fair wage, that's what.
 
If they were here on work visas, they'd probably have little to worry about. But they're not, and we know it, and these weepy shithead journos know it, and this song and dance is very fucking tiresome by now.
 
Dude it's so fucking funny that every single one of these articles be like

"Representing the illegal spics is Rabbi Hekel Yoheim Shmoolie Shekelbaum Rosenberg Shekelstein Sheckelbergenstein Esquire."
I always bring up Prop 187; people of California voted to restrict illegals from tax dollars/welfare. Who was the judge that led the charge to stop the will of the people; why a Mariana Pfaelzer. Sure enough, same with Prop 8, should California ban gay marriage. There was only one demographic whose majority voted in favor of gay marriage. Anything decent and honest is anathema to these people.
 
Lol, so the implication of being deported is also doing exactly what the bleeding hearts said would happen when these jackasses would get deported. Maybe if they were here legally then they wouldn’t have to fear such a thing. I know, wild thought for sure.
 
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