Day labor center to open
Eron Ben-Yehuda
A job center for day laborers opens in Huntington Beach on Wednesday, but
critics prefer the doors remain shut.
Some worry that the center will turn into a city-sponsored tax dodge and
a haven for immigrants, while the workers themselves predict bringing
them all together in one place will create tussles over who gets what
kind of work.
The police department pushed hard for the center in response to
complaints about the 100 or so laborers who, on a daily basis, pick up
odd jobs on the street, Huntington Beach Police Lt. Luis Ochoa said.
Once the center opens, officers will crack down on workers who gather in
the Oak View community along Slater Avenue, by Loehmann’s Five Points
Plaza on Delaware Avenue and the Home Depot’s Expo Design Center mall at
the corner of Goldenwest Street and Edinger Avenue, Ochoa said.
Some will be fined or even arrested if they don’t stop soliciting work,
and the same punishment applies to employers who seek them out, he said.
Many merchants complain that day laborers who hang out in front of their
storefronts interfere with business, Ochoa said.
“It’s intimidating to many citizens, mostly women,” he said.
“Occasionally, we have men that use the opportunity to drink and become
intoxicated.”
They also create traffic problems when they rush around cars that stop to
pick them up, he said. And some leave litter behind.
Day laborer Gustavo Guilleu, 39, admits that some workers are out of
line.
But the group he stands with near the Expo Design Center is different.
“In this place, we respect each other,” he said. “We prefer to be here.”
There’s an understanding among the men, he said, about how the jobs are
divided. And each group of laborers scattered throughout the city has
more or less staked out a specific territory where others are not
welcome, he said.
But the center, by Gothard Street and Talbert Avenue, will lump everyone
together, Guilleu said.
“We can’t (all) eat from one plate,” he said.
Ochoa says the center will improve their lives by providing a safe and
clean place to find employment. And because the center, made up of a used
trailer and an outdoor shelter, will be run by two part-time city
staffers, employers may be less likely to exploit the workers, he said.
The taxpayers will definitely be exploited, said City Councilman Dave
Sullivan, the only council member who opposed the project, which was
approved in August 1998.
The $40,000 federal grant that paid for most of the center’s cost should
not be helping illegal immigrants, whom Sullivan suspects make up much of
the ranks of day laborers.
“Every dollar that’s spent on illegal aliens is not spent on those that
deserve it,” he said.
The center will also facilitate an “underground” economy because many
employers who hire these workers pay them money under the table, he said.
Ochoa said staffers will check for proper identification such as green
cards, but Sullivan remains unconvinced.
“I think that anybody that has anything to do with this opening should,
instead, be hanging their head in shame,” he said.
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