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Title: Immigration Raids Hamper California’s Construction Industry and Fire Recovery

by Julia Evans – Entertainment Editor

Immigration Enforcement Slows California‘s Fire Rebuilding,Threatens Economic Stability

Los Angeles,CA ‌- Increased immigration enforcement ‍actions across California⁤ are hindering wildfire recovery efforts​ and exacerbating existing economic challenges,according to ​reports from the Los Angeles Times and The ⁤New‍ York Times. The raids, ‌targeting both undocumented and ​legally present workers, are creating labour shortages​ in critical sectors ​like construction and home healthcare, ⁣impacting rebuilding projects and raising concerns ‍about the ‍state’s long-term‌ economic health.

The enforcement surge comes as California faces a meaningful demographic‌ shift. Giovanni Peri,director of the UC Davis Global Migration Center,points to an​ impending loss of​ nearly a million ‌working-age Americans in the next decade due ⁢to aging ‍populations. “We ⁢will have a very large elderly population and that will demand a lot of services in … home healthcare [and other industries] but there will be fewer and fewer ⁢workers ‌to do these types ⁤of jobs,” Peri⁤ stated.

USC​ demographer Dowell Myers highlights⁣ a declining worker-to-retiree ratio, signaling a ⁣future ‌shortage ​of individuals contributing to Social⁤ Security and Medicare.Myers argues that‍ deporting long-term residents‌ carries⁣ both “an ‍extreme​ social cost and also⁣ an economic cost.”

The impact⁢ is already visible on the ground. At a Pasadena Home Depot, a gathering⁢ point for day laborers, workers ​expressed concerns ‌about diminished job opportunities. gavino Dominguez,‌ a worker with legal status, noted, “But there’s very little work.”⁤

Construction is particularly affected.⁣ Umberto Andrade, a general⁢ contractor, ‍reported losing employees for periods of one‌ to two weeks due to fear ⁢of⁣ raids, though they eventually returned out of financial necessity. Brock Harris,a real estate agent ‍representing a ‍developer in Altadena,stated ‌that ⁢a rebuilding project was⁤ temporarily slowed in June⁤ following⁣ an ICE visit. “The housing shortage in California was​ already terrible before the fires, and ‍now it’s 10 times worse,” ‌Harris said. ⁣He added that ​delays caused by labor shortages are “slowing the rebuilding of‍ L.A.” and ‌increasing costs for everyone.

The vast majority of those targeted by the increased enforcement are not violent criminals, ⁢according to reporting ⁢from the Los Angeles Times. This focus on broad enforcement,rather than prioritizing criminal activity,is drawing criticism from those observing the economic fallout.

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