May 1, 2006

Immigrants Flex Economic Muscle

Hundreds Of Thousands Skip Work, Take To Streets In Nationwide Boycott

  • Play CBS Video Video A Day Without Immigrants?

    Millions of immigrants across the United States missed work, skipped school and marched in the streets. As Byron Pitts reports, this time, many politicians joined them.

  • Video 'Day Without Immigrants'

    Protesters demonstrated in large numbers in Los Angeles on what was called a "Day Without Immigrants." CBS News' Teri Okita reports.

  • Video New Faces In The Old West?

    In Dodge City, Kan., immigrants marched and meatpacking plants closed as a sign of support for their overwhelmingly Hispanic workforce. But as Kelly Cobiella reports, not everyone was unified.

    • Demonstrators march through downtown Sacramento, Calif., as part of a nationwide work boycott, Monday May, 1, 2006.

      Demonstrators march through downtown Sacramento, Calif., as part of a nationwide work boycott, Monday May, 1, 2006.  (AP)

    • Thousands of people attend a pro-immigrant rally, May 1, 2006, in Denver.

      Thousands of people attend a pro-immigrant rally, May 1, 2006, in Denver.  (AP/Rocky Mountain News)

    • Several hundred people rally for immigrant rights before boarding buses in Racin, Wis., to attend a rally in Milwaukee, Monday, May 1, 2006.

      Several hundred people rally for immigrant rights before boarding buses in Racin, Wis., to attend a rally in Milwaukee, Monday, May 1, 2006.  (AP)

    • Oliver Lopez, 4, sits on one of the school buses that took several hundred people from Racine, Wis., to a rally for immigrant rights in Milwaukee, Monday, May 1, 2006. Several hundred people held a rally before they boarded the buses.

      Oliver Lopez, 4, sits on one of the school buses that took several hundred people from Racine, Wis., to a rally for immigrant rights in Milwaukee, Monday, May 1, 2006. Several hundred people held a rally before they boarded the buses.  (AP)

    • Uly Linares makes the rounds with a publication promoting the planned Mayday

      Uly Linares makes the rounds with a publication promoting the planned Mayday "Day Without Immigrants" work and spending boycott, an effort to make Americans feel the economic contributions of illegal aliens.  (AP Photo/Phil McCarten)

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(CBS/AP) 
The boycott was organized by immigrant activists angered by federal legislation that would criminalize illegal immigrants and fortify the U.S.-Mexico border. Its goal was to raise awareness about immigrants' economic power.

Industries that rely on immigrant workers were clearly affected, though the impact was not uniform.

Tyson Foods Inc., the world's largest meat producer, shuttered about a dozen of its more than 100 plants and saw "higher-than-usual absenteeism" at others. Most of the closures were in states such as Iowa and Nebraska. Eight of 14 Perdue Farms chicken plants also closed for the day.

None of the 175 seasonal laborers who normally work Mike Collins' 500 acres of onion fields in southeastern Georgia showed up.

"We need to be going wide open this time of year to get these onions out of the field," he said. "We've got orders to fill. Losing a day in this part of the season causes a tremendous amount of problems."

It was the same story in Indiana, where the owner of a landscaping business said he was at a loss. About 25 Hispanic workers — 90 percent of the field work force — never reported Monday to Salsbery Brothers Landscaping.

"We're basically shut down in our busiest month of the year," said owner Jeff Salsbery. "It's going to cost me thousands of dollars."

In the Los Angeles area, restaurants and markets were dark and truckers avoided the nation's largest shipping port. About one in three small businesses was closed downtown, including the cluttered produce market and fashion district.

The construction and nursery industries were among the hardest hit by the work stoppage in Florida.

Bill Spann, executive vice president of the Associated General Contractors of Greater Florida, said more than half the workers at construction sites in Miami-Dade County did not show up Monday.

"If I lose my job, it's worth it," said Jose Cruz, an immigrant from El Salvador who protested with several thousand others in the rural Florida city of Homestead rather than work his construction job. "It's worth losing several jobs to get my papers."

The impact on schools was significant. In the sprawling Los Angeles Unified School District, which is 73 percent Hispanic, about 72,000 middle and high school students were absent — roughly one in every four.

In San Francisco, Benita Olmedo pulled her 11-year-old daughter and 7-year-old son from school.

"I want my children to know their mother is not a criminal," said Olmedo, a nanny who came here illegally in 1986 from Mexico. "I want them to be as strong I am. This shows our strength."

In the normally bustling Port of Long Beach, about 30 miles south of downtown Los Angeles, was eerily quiet, with many truck drivers avoiding work. Lunch truck operator Sammy Rodriguez, 77, said 100 trucks normally line up in the mornings outside the California United Terminals. On Monday, he said, just three or four showed up.

Some of the rallies drew small numbers of counter-protesters, including one in Pensacola, Fla.

"You should send all of the 13 million aliens home, then you take all of the welfare recipients who are taking a free check and make them do those jobs," said Jack Culberson, a retired Army colonel who attended the Pensacola rally. "It's as simple as that."

Jesse Hernandez, who owns a Birmingham, Alabama, company that supplies Hispanic laborers to companies around the southeastern U.S., shut down his four-person office in solidarity with the demonstrations.

"Unfortunately," he said, "human nature is that you don't really know what you have until you don't have it."


©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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