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Study on Day Laborers

 

National Study of Day Laborers Exposes Abuse, Injuries
 
 
A  newly released nationwide study, co-authored by UCLA Department of Urban  Planning Associate Professor Abel Valenzuela Jr., reveals information about  the lives and plight of day laborers in the United States. The study, a  collaboration of research from UCLA, the University of Chicago, and New  York’s New School University, is titled, “On the Corner: Day Labor in  the United States,” and provides important information about an often seen,  but little understood, group. Since its release, the study has received wide  media coverage in both print and television.
 
  The following release details the study:
 
  They attend church, raise children and participate in community activities  and institutions. Yet, when America’s day laborers go to work, they have  experiences that would shock any other upstanding community member: police  harassment, violence at the hands of employers, withheld wages and conditions  so dangerous that is not unusual for them to be sidelined for more than a  month with work-related injuries or to work for weeks on end in pain.
 
  This is the vivid portrait painted by the first nationwide study of America’s  117,600 day laborers. Orchestrated by social scientists from UCLA, the University  of Illinois at Chicago and New Yorks New School University, “On the  Corner: Day Labor in the United States” presents findings from a survey  of 264 hiring sites in 143 municipalities in 20 U.S. states and the District  of Columbia.
 
  “The goal was to document a population that, though quite visible on the  corners of U.S. cities, is poorly understood by the public and by policy  makers,” said Nik Theodore, an assistant professor in the Urban Planning  and Policy Program at the University of Illinois, Chicago, and one of the  study’s three lead authors. “We hope to inform policy debates so that  decision-makers can devise thoughtful and effective strategies for resolving  many of the problems that day laborers face.”
 
  Three years in the making, the report includes the first-ever national count  of U.S. day laborers, little-known characteristics of these workers  backgrounds and troubling aspects of their working conditions across five  U.S. regions: the West, Midwest, Southwest, South and East.
  “Day labor has been thrust into the public consciousness, but we’re  concerned that the debate has gone on without an understanding of what gives  rise to the phenomenon or what the many downsides are to work in this  field,” said Abel Valenzuela, a UCLA social scientist and study  co-author.
 
  Among the findings:
 
  Once contained to ports-of-entry cities along the East and West coasts, day  labor is now a nationwide phenomenon, spilling into small and rural towns  throughout America, including the South and Midwest.
 
  Day labor may be widespread, but the total count of these workers is actually  one-tenth to one-20th the size bandied about by anti-immigration forces.
 
  Wage theft is the most common abuse suffered by day laborers, with nearly  half of all workers having been denied payment in the two months prior to the  survey.
 
  Just over three-quarters of day laborers are undocumented immigrants, meaning  that the share of American citizens working in day labor is much higher than  commonly supposed and that day laborers account for only a small fraction of  the estimated 7- to 11-million undocumented immigrants in America today.
 
  Valenzuela, Theodore and New School economist Edwin Meléndez directed teams  of surveyors during July and August 2004 as they interviewed 2,660 randomly  selected day laborers at 264 hiring sites across the nation.
 
  Interviewers asked about the workers educational backgrounds, family lives,  occupational histories and experiences as day laborers, including injuries  sustained on the job and the nature and frequency of abuse at the hands of  employers, merchants, police and security guards.
  Using statistical methods pioneered by researchers of another shifting and  hard-to-quantify American population – the homeless – Theodore, Valenzuela  and Meléndez were able to create a statistically valid snapshot of day labor  in America today, a portrait previously considered too difficult to capture.
 
  Many day laborers turned out to be family men. A significant number are  married (36 percent) or living with a partner (7 percent), and almost  two-thirds have children. Furthermore, many are engaged in community  activities. More than half regularly attend church, one-fifth are involved in  sports clubs and more than one-quarter participated in community worker  centers. Many (40 percent) have been in the United States for more than six  years.
 
  “These guys proved to be much more active and ensconced members of their  communities than commonly supposed,” said Valenzuela, a UCLA associate  professor of urban planning and Chicana/o studies and director of UCLA’s  Center for the Study of Urban Poverty.
 
  The researchers say that the prevalence of abuse proved to be the most  defining characteristic of the market. In the two months leading up to the  survey, 44 percent of day laborers were denied food, water and breaks; 32  percent worked more hours than initially agreed to with the employer; 28  percent were insulted or threatened by the employer; and 27 percent were  abandoned at the worksite by an employer.
 
  “Coming into the study, we knew that the low-wage market is rife with  violations of basic labor standards, but we still found the statistics  shocking and disturbing,” said Theodore, who also is the director of  UICs Center for Urban Economic Development.
 
  Day laborers suffered violence at the hands of employers, fellow day laborers  and bands of youths who see easy marks in the workers who are paid in cash  for a days work.
 
  “I dont know of any other occupation so susceptible to so many  abuses,” Valenzuela said.
 
  Injuries were also common. In the year leading up to the study, 20 percent of  day laborers were injured on the job, and of those two-thirds missed work as  a result. In fact, accidents sidelined injured workers for an average of 33  days and caused them to work in pain for an average of 20 days. More than  half did not receive the medical care they needed for the injury, either  because the worker could not afford health care or the employer refused to  cover the worker under the company’s workers compensation insurance.
 
  The Midwest displayed the highest rates of abuse in almost every category.  Also with the highest overall injury rate, the regions laborers were the most  likely to face physical risk. A whopping 92 percent said they considered  their work to be dangerous.
 
  “The dangers and injuries in the Midwest may have to do with the fact  that roofing jobs are undertaken at significantly higher rates than in the  other regions,” Theodore said.
 
  Anti-immigration forces have portrayed illegal immigration as the driving  force behind day labor. But the researchers found a market fueled by a  growing zeal for home improvement and by employers under pressure to cut  wages and benefits. The report characterizes the market as ’employer-driven’  with more than two-thirds of day laborers hired repeatedly by the same employers,  including contractors in the building and landscaping trades.
 
  The researchers call for greater worker protections, better monitoring of  safety conditions and increased access to legal services to adjudicate  workers rights violations.
 
  “Many day laborers believe that avenues for enforcement of labor and  employment laws are effectively closed to them,” Valenzuela said.  “This belief is reinforced by the general climate of hostility that  exists toward day laborers in many parts of the country.”
 
  The researchers also advocate support for strategies that can help day  laborers make the transition from the informal economy into better jobs and  what the report calls realistic immigration reform, including the normalizing  of the immigration status of undocumented workers.
 
  “Employers are often able to deter workers from contesting labor  violations by threatening to turn them over to federal immigration  authorities,” Theodore said. “Even when employers do not make these  threats overtly, day laborers, mindful of their undocumented status, are  reluctant to seek recourse through government channels. We want to change  that.”
 
  A complete copy of “On the Corner: Day Labor in the United States”  can be found at http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/issr/csup/index.php .
  The UCLA School of Public Affairs was founded in 1994, joining Urban Planning  and the School of Social Welfare with the newly created Department of Public  Policy. Today, with more than 75 faculty, more than 400 graduate students,  and hundreds more undergraduates taking advantage of our offerings in our  popular Public Affairs minor, the School is the largest of its kind in the  nation.
  More information about the UCLA School of Public Affairs may be found online  at: www.spa.ucla.edu

 

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