11:57 am By Maegan La Mala · economy|Immigration|Labor
5 Jan 2010According to an article in the NYT (who still thinks it’s ok to use “illegal” as an adjective), homelessness is up among day laborer in Queens.
Mr. Ruano, 38, who had drawn his living from 69th Street and Broadway for six years, has been on the streets since. He and other hard-luck day laborers have slept wherever they can: in the emergency room at Elmhurst Hospital Center, in unfinished buildings abandoned by bankrupt developers and under bridges along the freight railroad tracks that slice through western Queens, where dirty mattresses and work boots lay on the rocky ground one recent morning.
“The only reason we don’t go hungry is because there are people who offer us food,” Mr. Ruano said on a snowy Saturday as he clutched a cup of soup from a group of Pentecostals feeding day laborers at a park on Woodside Avenue.
With their isolation and day-to-day existence, the laborers are perhaps the most invisible and hardest-to-reach victims of the recession, advocates and city officials say.
The invisible comment got to me. I have lived in an immigrant neighborhood for a number of years and there is nothing invisible about this trend. There is a small plaza three blocks from casa mala where laborers who aren’t working hang out and more and more I have seen more people there, and yes sleeping.
It’s amazing to me really how visible day laborers are when they are allegedly peeing and drinking on “white streets” but in POC/immigrant neighborhoods, their not having a home is suddenly invisible.
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6 Responses to Homelessness Up Among Day Laborers in NYC
Bryan J.
January 5th, 2010 at 1:48 pm
Maybe by “invisible” the writer meant, “people don’t care about their plight as much as others who have suffered from the recession”. But, yes, I agree–out-of-sight (purposely), out-of-mind is definitely why they are “invisible”. Did you see what Saul Linares is doing on Long Island?
http://www.longislandwins.com/blog/in_the_news/program_brings_coffee_and_bre.php
Maegan La Mala
January 5th, 2010 at 2:26 pm
That’s an awesome program. Is this being done in the areas where now it’s “illegal” to be a day laborer?
Bryan J.
January 5th, 2010 at 3:08 pm
It doesn’t look like it is being done in Oyster Bay, where the anti-day laborer ordinance was passed recently.
Maybe I will stop by the area tomorrow, and if any day laborers still congregate there, go to a DD for a box o Joe.
Bryan J.
January 5th, 2010 at 3:13 pm
*Correction
The program does cover the place where the anti-day laborer ordinance was passed. Locust Valley is one of the places they are planning on visiting, which is the village within Oyster Bay where day-laborers congregate.
Giuseppe
January 5th, 2010 at 5:34 pm
Unfortunately, our country has had a history of being anti-immigrant. The Irish would read the classifieds and see “NINA” which stood for “NO Irish Need Apply.” When the Italians arrived “NINA” became “NO Italians Need Apply.”
Can you even imagine seeing something like that today? Something that is so unconcealed against the hiring of an immigrant group.
The Irish and Italian immigrants faced many of the difficulties that new immigrants and laborers face today.
Many saw the Irish as drunks who joined gangs and Italians as “low browed” anarchists, and these immigrants were white. They were accused of cluttering the streets of Manhattan and diminishing the quality of life in cities and towns. Doesn’t this sound familiar? It’s history repeating itself.
Not everything is based on color.
uberVU - social comments
January 19th, 2010 at 5:50 pm
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