
Fear of ICE raids is making heat intolerable for Southern California families
The undocumented mother of three — who, like others The Times spoke with, declined to give her last name out of fear for her family's safety — says the heat in recent summers has been increasingly difficult to manage. And now, with fewer workers showing up due to fears of ongoing immigration enforcement raids across California, Isabel says she and those who remain have to endure fewer breaks and more physical strain.
Crews that once numbered five groups of 18 workers each are down to three groups of 18. The demands, however, haven't changed.
'You have to pack so many boxes in a day,' Isabel said in Spanish. 'If it takes you a while to get water, you'll neglect the boxes you're packing. You have to put in more effort.'
California's outdoor heat standard — which applies to all workers, legal or undocumented — guarantees breaks for shade and water. But the fear of falling behind often discourages workers from taking advantage, labor advocates say. And with fewer workers in the fields, employers have begun asking those who do show up to stay later into the day; some who used to be home by 1 p.m. are now in the fields during the hottest parts of the afternoon, they say.
Isabel described a recent incident of a woman on her crew who appeared to be suffering from heatstroke. The supervisors did help her, 'but it took them a while to call 911,' Isabel said.
Sandra Reyes, a program manager at TODEC Legal Center, which works with immigrants and their families in the Inland Empire and Coachella Valley, said she has seen the same pattern unfold across California's agricultural communities. Fewer workers means greater physical strain for those who remain. And in the fields, that strain compounds rapidly under high heat. 'There are times when the body just gives out,' Reyes said.
'All of this is derived from fear.'
Across Southern California, from fields to homes, parks to markets, the fear of immigration enforcement is making it harder for individuals and families to stay safe as temperatures rise.
Early on June 18 in the eastern Coachella Valley, word spread among the agricultural workers that unmarked cars and SUVS — and, later on, helicopters and convoys of military vehicles — that they rightly guessed carried federal agents were converging on the fields.
Anticipating a raid by Customs and Border Protection or Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the reaction was immediate. Workers — many undocumented — fled, some going into the fields, hiding beneath grapevines or climbing up date palm trees. Local organizers began to get calls from frightened workers and their families.
Making matters worse was the heat. Inland Congregations United for Change, a nonprofit community organization in San Bernardino, sent out teams with water and ice. They found a number of people who had been in the blazing sun for hours, afraid to return home. Some had run out of water as temperatures soared to 113 degrees, eating grapes off the vine in an attempt to stay hydrated. 'There [were] people who are elderly, who need medication,' said J. Reyes Lopez, who works with the organization.
Officials later confirmed that the multiple-agency operation led by the Drug Enforcement Administration had detained 70 to 75 undocumented individuals — part of the Trump administration's immigration enforcement effort.
In the days that followed, there were lasting impacts in the fields. 'Many [workers] have not returned to work, especially those with small children,' said TODEC's Reyes. And for those who did return, it soon became clear that they were expected to do the same amount of work, only now with fewer people.
The summer of 2024 saw record-breaking heat in Southern California, and experts predict 2025 will be just as bad, if not worse. These rising temperatures — largely due to climate change — have serious effects on the health of workers and their families, said Arturo Vargas Bustamante, a UCLA professor of health policy and management. Exposure to extreme heat can trigger or exacerbate a raft of health issues such as cramps, strokes and cardiovascular and kidney disease, as well as mental health issues.
It's not just agricultural workers who are affected. Car wash employees often are exposed to direct heat without regular access to water or breaks, said Flor Rodriguez, executive director of the CLEAN Carwash Worker Center.
Because that industry has become a target for enforcement operations, car wash owners have had to hire staff to replace workers who have been apprehended or who no longer come in because they fear they could be next. That often means hiring younger or less experienced people who are unfamiliar with workplace conditions and protections.
'The most dangerous day for you at work is your first day,' said Sheheryar Kaoosji, executive director of the Warehouse Worker Resource Center.
Even when workers feel physically unsafe, Kaoosji said, they may fail to speak up, due to fears about job security. When that happens, he said, 'preventative tactics like breaks, cooling down, drinking water, don't happen.'
Itzel — a recipient of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy whose family lives in Long Beach — has seen the same patterns among her co-workers in the landscaping industry.
'They wanna get to the job site early and they want to leave as early as they can,' she said. 'They're not taking their breaks. … They're not taking their lunches.' When they do, it's often for 30 minutes or less, with many choosing to eat behind closed gates rather than under the shade of a tree if it means they can remain better hidden.
Overexertion under peak heat, noted Javier Hernandez, executive director of the Inland Coalition for Immigrant Justice, is becoming a survival strategy — a way to reduce exposure to ICE, even at the cost of physical health.
Heat, unlike more visible workplace hazards, often goes unreported and unrecognized, especially in industries where workers are temporary, undocumented or unfamiliar with their rights.
'There's a huge undercount of the number of people who are impacted by heat,' Kaoosji said. 'Heat is really complicated.'
And with ICE presence now reported at clinics and hospitals, access to medical care has been compromised. 'It's just another way for people — these communities — to be terrorized,' Kaoosji said.
In the Inland Empire, where summer temperatures regularly climb into the triple digits, Hernandez said many families are now making impossible choices: Do they turn on the air conditioning or buy groceries? Do they stay inside and risk heat exhaustion, or go outside and risk being taken?
These questions have reshaped Isabel's life. She now goes to work only a few days a week, when she feels safe enough to leave her children. That means there's not enough money to cover the bills.
Isabel and her family now spend most of the day confined to a single room in their mobile home, the only one with air conditioning. Their electricity bill has rocketed from $80 to $250 a month. So far, her family has been able to make partial payments to the utility, but she fears what will happen if their electricity gets cut off, as has happened to some of her neighbors.
Before the raids, Isabel's family would cool off at a nearby stream, go to air-conditioned shops or grab a raspado, or shaved ice. But in the face of heightened enforcement, these sorts of routines have largely been abandoned. 'Those are very simple things,' Hernandez said, 'but they are very meaningful to families.'
Fear also makes it difficult to spend time at public cooling centers, libraries or other public buildings that in theory could offer an escape from the heat. Isabel's youngest child isn't used to staying quiet for long periods, and she worries they'll draw attention in unfamiliar public spaces.
'I do my best to keep them cool,' Isabel said, explaining that she now resorts to bathing her children regularly as one cooling strategy.
Itzel's father, who is undocumented, hasn't left his apartment in over a month out of fear of immigration enforcement actions. He used to make up to $6,000 a month as a trucker — now, he can't afford to turn on his air conditioning.
Where once there were weekend walks, family barbecues, trips to the park or the beach to cool down, now there is isolation.
'We're basically in a cell,' Itzel said. 'This is worse than COVID. At least with COVID, we could walk around the block.'
The same has been true for Mirtha, a naturalized citizen who lives in Maywood with her husband, whose immigration status is uncertain, and their five U.S.-born children.
In previous summers, her family — which includes four special needs children — relied on public spaces, such as parks, splash pads, shopping centers and community centers to cool down.
Now her family spends most of the time isolated and indoors. Even critical errands such as picking up medications or groceries have shifted to nighttime hours for safety reasons. Meanwhile, her husband, a cook, stopped working altogether in early June due to fear of deportation. Even turning on their one small air conditioner has become a financial decision.
Constant fear, confinement and oppressive heat has worsened her children's mental and physical well-being, she said. Staying indoors has also led to serious health challenges for Mirtha herself, who suffers from high blood pressure and other medical conditions. On a particularly hot day on June 21, Mirtha got so sick she ended up in the hospital.
'My high blood pressure got too high. I started having tachycardia,' she said. Despite Mirtha's citizenship status, she hesitated to call emergency services, and instead had her husband drive her and drop her off at the emergency room entrance.
Summer temperatures continue to rise and enforcement operations keep expanding. 'We're only seeing the beginning,' said Mar Velez, policy director at the Latino Coalition for a Healthy California. 'People are suffering silently.'
Jason De León, a UCLA professor of anthropology and Chicana/o and Central American studies, warns that deportations taking place in the summer will also probably force many to reattempt border crossings under the most dangerous conditions of the year. 'We're not only putting people in harm's way in the United States,' he said, 'but then by deporting them in the summer … those folks are going to now be running this kind of deadly gantlet through the desert again. They are going to attempt to come back to the only life that many folks have, the only life they've ever known.'
Isabel insists they're here for one thing: to work.
'We came here just to work, we want to be allowed to work,' she said. 'Not to feel like we do now, just going out and hiding.' More than anything, 'we want to be again like we were before — free.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Intercept
4 hours ago
- The Intercept
What Court Order? Federal Agents Keep Raiding LA Workplaces Despite Ban
As day laborers and street vendors selling breakfast lined the parking lot of the MacArthur Park Home Depot in Los Angeles early Wednesday morning, a yellow Penske moving truck pulled into the lot. Its driver claimed he was looking for movers, according to organizers, security guards, and a day laborer who witnessed the event and spoke to The Intercept. That's when a group of at least seven Border Patrol agents dressed in tactical gear stormed out of the back of the truck and rushed toward the day laborers and street vendors gathered outside. Chief Border Patrol Agent Gregory Bovino dubbed the raid 'Operation Trojan Horse,' sharing video on social media from a Fox News reporter who was embedded with agents inside the moving truck. Agents detained at least 16 people during the raid, which appears to be in direct defiance of a temporary restraining order a federal judge put in place in early July after immigrants rights groups sued the government. After a month of militarized raids and racial profiling throughout Southern California, Federal Judge Maame Ewusi-Mensah Frimpong of California's Central District, in response to a class-action lawsuit filed by community organizations and detained workers, delivered the Trump administration a major blow. She issued an order that prohibits federal agents from targeting individuals based on their race and ethnicity; whether they speak Spanish or English with an accent; their location such as a car wash, department store parking lot, or other worksite; or their occupation, such as landscapers or street vendors. The Trump administration appealed, but the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Friday upheld the temporary restraining order. The order had brought relative calm to the region in recent weeks, slowing what had been near-daily operations to occasional isolated incidents. But the Trump administration's Southern California campaign was not over. Since Friday's decision to uphold the temporary restraining order, federal agents have raided at least five other worksites in Los Angeles County, according to organizers and witnesses who spoke to The Intercept. Though it's unclear whether federal agents had warrants for the operations, the raids did not appear to be aimed at any specific individuals and took place at worksites that had been previously targeted, all with predominantly immigrant and Latino workforces. 'Basically everything that they said not to do in the [temporary restraining order] was on a to-do checklist for today,' said a day laborer organizer at the MacArthur Park Home Depot on Wednesday who was not authorized to speak with the media. 'Racial profiling, check. Going to a Home Depot, check. That was on purpose to undermine the courts and to undermine the power of the law.' The organizer said witnesses had reported seeing agents brandishing firearms at bystanders in front of the Home Depot, including at U.S. citizens. 'There's so many violations to the Constitution, not just to migrants,' he said Border Patrol and the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to The Intercept's request for comment. Penske said it was not aware its truck would be used in Wednesday's immigration operation and said its policy 'strictly prohibits the transportation of people in the cargo area of its vehicles under any circumstances.' The company said it planned to reach out to the Department of Homeland Security to 'reinforce its policy to avoid improper use of its vehicles in the future.' Since Friday's decision upholding the temporary restraining order, federal agents raided a car wash in Lakewood, detaining two workers on Saturday; a Superior Grocers in Lynwood on Sunday; another Home Depot in Hollywood on Monday, where at least two individuals were taken; and the Magnolia Car Wash in Fountain Valley, Orange County, where agents on Tuesday detained four workers, according to CLEAN Carwash Worker Center. Among those taken in Fountain Valley was a father originally from El Salvador who was the main financial supporter for his mother, according to a GoFundMe page set up by a relative. Instituto de Educacion Popular del Sur de California, or IDEPSCA, which advocates for the rights of day laborers and immigrants, said it is still working to confirm how many people were detained at the Hollywood Home Depot on Monday. During that raid, federal agents used a horn that tamaleros use to call people over to buy tamales in an attempt to lure people to detain them, said Maegan Ortiz, executive director of IDEPSCA, in a video posted on social media. Read Our Complete Coverage Deceptive tactics used by immigration authorities were recently banned in the context of home raids as a part of a settlement in a separate class-action lawsuit based in Los Angeles. The lawsuit was filed on behalf of people who were lured out of their homes by ICE agents who claimed they were local law enforcement officers. The Penske moving truck plot on Wednesday may have been beyond the scope of that settlement, but still prompted concern from organizers. 'They had a lot of officers and did it quickly, and did not present warrants, and were targeting people indiscriminately,' said Zoie Matthew, an organizer with the Los Angeles Tenants Union, which has run a community defense center at the store since the initial June 6 raid. 'They were violating the TRO completely — which it seems like has been the case for the past several Home Depots they've hit this week.' Even after the restraining order was granted, Bovino, who is heading Border Patrol operations across California, doubled down, promising to deliver on Trump's pledge to carry out the largest mass deportation campaign in history with a daily quota of 3,000 arrests per day. 'Different day, different illegal aliens, same objective,' Bovino wrote on his X account on Wednesday, alongside an edited video montage of agents detaining workers at a car wash. 'We're on a mission here in Los Angeles. And we're not leaving until we accomplish our goals.' The Fox News reporter who embedded with agents, Matt Finn, quoted DHS on his X account, saying that 'MS 13 has a chokehold on this area, which is one reason they're carrying out the highly optic immigration raids.' The government and Fox News have both evoked MS-13 to justify a previous raid in MacArthur Park in early July in which ICE agents, alongside military service members, surrounded and swarmed soccer fields and other recreation areas where a summer camp was taking place — but made zero arrests. Even so, Wednesday's raids appeared to target only workers. The majority of people detained during immigration operations in the LA area in recent months do not have criminal records. Video taken by residents who live in an apartment directly overlooking the MacArthur Park Home Depot parking lot showed two Border Patrol agents yanking one man toward the pavement, while other agents pulled three women from a row of tables topped with food and drinks. The workers and vendors were led toward a white van parked in front of the Penske truck. A day laborer told The Intercept he managed to run inside the Home Depot with other workers during the raid and hid for a half-hour. He immigrated to the U.S. from Guatemala a year ago to stay with his cousin and to find work. 'I'm nervous,' said the man, who goes to the Home Depot every day to find work. 'I'm nervous because I feel like they're going to come back again,' he said. Even so, the man said he plans to continue returning to the store, the only place he knows where to find a job.

Indianapolis Star
7 hours ago
- Indianapolis Star
Braun's immigration crackdown targets wrong people, violates Constitution
If you commit the 'crime' of speaking Spanish, watch your back. The Indiana State Police and Indiana National Guard are looking for you. Gov. Mike Braun recently announced the state police, Department of Corrections and Indiana Department of Homeland Security will join the national guard in assisting the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement roundup of immigrants into the U.S. Braun said the state will make 1,000 beds available in the Miami Correctional Facility to imprison people who have been convicted of nothing and have been given no due process. The Marion County Sheriff has said he will go along with the order, in part because the federal government pays him per detainee, while the state does not. This is an affront to anyone who values liberty, limited government and human dignity. It wastes police resources — and Hoosiers' tax money — in diverting them from searching for and prosecuting crimes against person and property by actual criminals to instead rounding up peaceful people who are seeking a better life. Immigrants work in our farms, factories and communities, shop at our stores, and contribute positively to our state's economy and culture. Opinion: Indiana taxpayers shouldn't subsidize $168M in data center corporate welfare It's also a gross violation of the words Braun said on Jan. 13, when he placed his hand on a Bible and swore an oath to God and the people of Indiana that he would uphold and defend both the Indiana and U.S. constitutions. Participating in President Trump's scheme to systematically dismantle due process and the rule of law is a clear violation of that solemn oath. While Braun and Trump claim this is a roundup of 'violent illegal immigrants,' the witch hunt has gone far beyond that. Of those being arrested, 71% have no criminal convictions at all. Among those who do, most are for minor offenses — and only 8% have been convicted of violent crimes. The number of those without any conviction being arrested and detained keeps rising. However, Trump has been eager to not just deport the 'violent' criminals, but also to round up anyone who is Latino, Asian or Middle Eastern, treating everyone as a potential illegal immigrant, to meet a quota of 3,000 arrests per day vocalized by White House adviser Stephen Miller, while the administration gleefully touts deplorable conditions in detention centers and violates due process rights. To desperately reach that goal, it means rounding up people who aren't criminals, but who have fled oppressive communist and socialist regimes and lawfully sought asylum, revoking visas and green cards for students without explanation, and sweeping up U.S. citizens and throwing them in jail. People showing up for their visa appointments — doing the right thing in good faith — are being arrested in court and taken to faraway detention facilities where they know nobody and have little chance of contacting representation. One case involved a 20-year-old Purdue student from South Korea who was on active student visa but arrested detained and shipped to Louisiana at her hearing. This is the work of a banana republic, not a republic bound by a constitution that has a very clear mandate to protect due process rights and a tradition of 'innocent until proven guilty.' Participating in such a system — and actively and enthusiastically doing so — is denying people their dignity, as well as their human rights. Briggs: Diego Morales' work ethic isn't the problem. It's his corruption. As Libertarians, we believe in the sovereignty of the individual and the freedom to live, work and move in peace. A state government deputizing local and state officers to participate in a federal scheme of rounding up people for the sole crime of looking different or speaking with an accent, on the hopes of 'finding illegals,' violates that principle. It undermines state sovereignty and also sows distrust between our immigrant communities and local authorities. The U.S. immigration system is irreparably broken. It is a Byzantine system with a number of hoops and steps someone must jump through to legally emigrate to the U.S., which incentivizes 'illegal immigration." The Trump administration has doubled down on it by not only making legal immigration more difficult, but also by revoking visas and arresting and deporting people going through the process the right way for small paperwork errors. Truly making America great would be living up to the words on the Statue of Liberty — 'Give us your tired, your poor, your huddled masses, yearning to breathe free' — not weaponizing local police to kidnap, detain and deport people trying to properly follow the system, while revoking visas and making the immigration system more difficult. Braun should not allow Indiana prisons to be used to detain people who are not criminals. He should honor our tradition of federalism by refusing to comply with the federal authorities carrying out these heinous acts. Meanwhile, the federal government should offer a bridge, not an alligator-infested moat, to those seeking a better life in the great melting pot of the U.S.
Yahoo
17 hours ago
- Yahoo
Roaring Fork School District looking for school director nominees
EAGLE COUNTY, Colo. (KREX) – The Roaring Fork School District, which stretches throughout Pitkin, Eagle and Garfield counties, is looking for candidates for the school director position. Their name would be placed on the ballot for the regular biennial school election which takes place Nov. 4. In this election, two directors will be elected and serve a four-year term representing districts A and E. To be eligible to run for the position, you need to be a resident of the director district which you would represent, and you're required to have been a registered elector of the school district for at least 12 consecutive months prior to the election. If you have been convicted of committing a sexual offense against a child, you are ineligible to run for the position. If you fit the bill and would like to run, you must file a written notice of intention while also getting a nomination petition signed by a minimum 50 eligible electors who are registered to vote in the regular biennial school election. To get a nomination petition, contact the district's designated election official, Jonathan Landon, at jlandon@ or 970-384-6009. If you speak Spanish, you can contact Cristina Vargas at cvargas@ or 970-384-6026. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Solve the daily Crossword