Raid Rumors Fuel Fear Among Immigrants

By LAURA WIDES-MUNOZ
The Associated Press
Saturday, April 29, 2006; 9:00 AM

MIAMI -- Thousands of illegal immigrants stayed home this week amid rumors of immigration roundups that federal officials say were unfounded, leaving some industries scrambling for workers.

Len Mills, executive vice president of Associated General Contractors of South Florida, estimated at least 50 percent of workers on construction jobs in the region had not shown up for work.


Day laborers wait for work near a Home Depot store in Phoenix, Friday, April 28, 2006. Activists supporting area immigrant workers plan to hold a protest outside the store Monday, as part the
Day laborers wait for work near a Home Depot store in Phoenix, Friday, April 28, 2006. Activists supporting area immigrant workers plan to hold a protest outside the store Monday, as part the "A Day Without an Immigrant" national boycott. Activists are targeting some Phoenix Home Depot stores where the store's management has asked day laborers seeking work, not to congregate on the premises. (AP Photo/Khampha Bouaphanh) (Khampha Bouaphanh - AP)

"This is costing millions of dollars a day, and I don't know who is going to pay for it," he said.

Rumors of random sweeps were rampant from coast to coast Friday, prompting many immigrants to stay home from work, take their children out of school and avoid church. Their absences added to immigrants' fears, as some thought their friends and co-workers had been arrested.

Mills said he believed even some legal workers were afraid.

"Everybody's edgy," said Chris Ruske, owner of a southern New Jersey nursery. "There's an awful lot of rhetoric, and you wonder what's true. You wonder if the immigration Gestapo are coming to get you."

Construction and agriculture were among the industries most affected.

Katie A. Edwards, executive director of Florida's Dade County Farm Bureau, said nearly a third of farmworkers did not come to the fields this week.

Mari Ramos, a Peruvian nanny whose tourist visa ran out in 2003, listened when friends warned her not to take public transportation or risk arrest.

"That's when I became nervous. I stopped going to my night job," the 36-year-old Miami woman said.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman Dean Boyd said the agency has received hundreds of calls about immigration raids in recent days. Such rumors are typical after a raid like the one last week in which more than 1,000 employees of pallet manufacturer IFCO were arrested at more than 40 company sites nationwide, he said.

"However, we don't conduct random sweeps," he said. "All our arrests are the result of investigations, evidence and intelligence."


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