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LA ICE raids send migrant workers into hiding

LA ICE raids send migrant workers into hiding

Daily Mail​08-07-2025
ICE raids across Los Angeles have driven the migrant workforce into hiding, sparking concerns over the sanctuary city's already rocky economic state. As the California city tries to recuperate from wildfires, businesses and developers have revealed they do not have the manpower to get these crucial jobs done. LA has one of the nation's largest immigrant workforces, with nearly 38 percent of workers originating outside the US, according to 2023 data.
Estimates from the Public Policy Institute of California suggest than one in 10 workers in the Golden State are undocumented immigrants, while the Migration Policy Institute reports there are roughly 950,000 'unauthorized' residents in LA county. Donald Trump's immigration crackdown has sparked concern among a significant portion of LA's laborers - especially after a recent bout of raids.
'Papers or not, fear spreads quickly,' real estate consulting firm Hilgard Founding Principal Joshua Baum told Bloomberg . 'When workers do not feel safe showing up to job sites, it slows down not only the pace of construction but also the willingness to propose new projects in the first place.' Immigration agents arrested more than 1,600 people in LA between June 6 and June 22, Bloomberg reported.
A prominent raid occurred as recently as the Fourth of July, with the City of West Hollywood condemning one conducted at a car wash that morning. As a result, job sites have been deserted, and construction and renovation projects have been delayed.
'We don't have enough people to staff the work and we're scrambling to figure it out,' Arturo Sneider, the CEO of Primestor, which manages more than 3,000 apartment development projects and $1.2 billion in shopping centers, told Bloomberg. Contributing to what many see as a labor crisis , more than 16,000 structures were wrecked by wildfires from Pacific Palisades to Altadena.
The damage may cost LA more than $250 billion, the Los Angeles Times reported. In order to tackle rebuilding the affected areas, the Urban Land Institute reported 70,000 workers will have to be added to LA County's 145,000 construction force by mid-2026. Roughly 14.5 percent of LA construction workers are undocumented, according to the Los Angeles Economic Development Corp.
California filed a lawsuit over the use of the National Guard following the first deployment, claiming Trump 'trampled' the state's sovereignty and sent troops without the governor's permission. Meanwhile, city officials said the demonstrations will ultimately cost taxpayers $32 million. Last week, Trump sued LA for failing to comply with federal agents.
LA Mayor Karen Bass vowed to fight against the lawsuit, claiming the raids are causing 'severe economic damage.' 'We know that Los Angeles is the test case, and we will stand strong,' Bass said. 'We do so because the people snatched off city streets and chased through parking lots are our coworkers, our neighbors, our family members, and they are Angelenos.'
West Hollywood officials wrote in their Friday statement: 'We reaffirm: our immigrant communities are not threats — they are vital contributors to the social, cultural, and economic fabric of our city, our state, and our nation.' While local officials have pointed fingers at the Trump administration for LA's alarming economic state, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has issued a blunt response.
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