Looking Back on A Day Without Immigrants
Looking Back on A Day Without Immigrants
Last Thursday was supposed to be a day without immigrants.All across the United States, foreign-born citizens and aliens alike showed their discontent with the Trump administration by staying home instead of showing up to work. Students skipped class, fast food crewmembers didn’t hit the time clock, and doctors didn’t don their signature white coats. From the Lower East Side of Manhattan to South Central LA, immigrants strove to make a statement: this is what would happen if we were gone.Business owners reacted with mixed feelings on Friday. Some restaurants printed messages of solidarity in the end space of their receipts, while others fired employees who hadn’t showed up their shifts. Twelve workers at the I Don’t Care Bar in Oklahoma were told over text to enjoy the day off, as they and their families would be having many more as newly-unemployed persons. A number of other companies fired strikers on grounds that they had violated no-call-no-show policies.According to a summary piece in The Atlantic, businesses which supported “A Day Without Immigrants” prepared in advance to be short-staffed. Matt Carr of The Little Red Fox in Washington, D.C., received a note from kitchen staff the day before workers refused to come back – they’d prepared fruit salad and all the dishes they could to make up for their absence on Thursday.“Immigrants are the backbone of this country and the heart and soul of the service industry,” Carr said in an interview with CNN. “Without them, our small business would crumble. They are also a part of the family here at Little Red Fox, and I, too, am worried about their future under this administration.”
"Closed" sign at Marco's Fish Market in South Philadelphia; photo credit to Jacqueline Larma, AP via The Charlotte Observer
Sources
'Day Without Immigrants' protests costs around 60 people their jobs after they skip workThe Fallout From 'A Day Without Immigrants'Immigrants in the Workforce, State by State and Industry By IndustryNationwide 'Day Without Immigrants' shuts down businesses
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.