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Mass Deportations Will Leave Homes Unbuilt in America

Mass Deportations Will Leave Homes Unbuilt in America

People seeking to build in America will face challenges due to the mass deportations agenda

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For all the talk about a housing shortage, there’s proportionately little attention paid to how the U.S. government is aggravating the situation by kicking out the workers who want to trade and build homes in America.

Shortages are caused by government regulations that prevent, discourage, or make it too onerous for people to build. With a housing market already strangled by government controls, and a construction industry composed of 30% immigrant labor, the Trump administration’s “mass deportation” agenda means an aggravated housing shortage.

Construction companies have long struggled to find and retain workers, and Trump’s immigration agenda is making this worse: not only is the administration targeting construction sites for immigration raids, but raids and threats to immigrants are notorious for having a chilling effect on workers. “Whole crews are not coming to work because they’re fearful of a raid,” the president of the National Association of Home Builders told ABC News in June.

While the administration claims that it’s focusing its enforcement efforts on “criminal aliens,” the truth is that, according to recent data, it’s mostly detaining peaceful illegal immigrants (as of September 5, 70% of detainees had no criminal convictions), and detaining and scaring even legal ones. Anyone here unlawfully is fair game for deportation, no matter how peaceful, given our draconian immigration controls. But the prioritization of workers for deportation, and the targeting of workplaces for raids, does nothing to “make America safe.” It, in fact, exacerbates the detrimental impact of existing government controls in the construction industry.

America’s atrocious immigration system prevents workers from immigrating legally to work in the construction industry. As many have explained before, it is nearly impossible for most workers to immigrate to America legally. Even the visa program designed to attract temporary construction workers, the H-2B visa, places severe restrictions on sponsors, making hiring extremely burdensome. This is partly because the program is capped at 66,000 visas annually for the entire country — less than 1/10th of 723,000, the estimated average number of job openings in the industry (according to the National Association of Home Builders). While the government has authorized extra visas in the past, construction companies continue to plead with the government to create more avenues for international workers to come build in America — so far unsuccessfully.

In turn, builders often hire illegal immigrants to fulfill the open positions in their companies.

The shortage caused by this pre-existing, anti-business system is now aggravated by indiscriminate enforcement, and cripples builders’ plans. The American Immigration Council estimates that President Trump’s deportation agenda could remove 1.5 million workers from the construction industry, causing unprecedented delays and damage to construction businesses and their customers. All due to arbitrary restrictions on work.

Homes in America will go unbuilt, rooms will go unpainted, plumbing will go unrepaired. Fewer workers will mean increased prices, longer wait times, and fewer maintenance services available for homes in the U.S. This means that homeowners won’t be able to promptly find a handyman to repair water damage and avoid further harm; fewer houses and rising rent prices will push people to leave their cities and their life plans.

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The federal government should protect the individual rights of everyone on American soil and keep out foreign threats, in part by having a strong and secure border. But keeping residents from hiring a contractor to fix their roof is not a protection of their rights — it’s a violation of them. Peaceful immigrant workers are here to make money and build a life by engaging in trade. Attacks on these workers are also attacks on the individuals seeking to trade with them for their services.  Instead of spending billions of dollars on deporting workers, the federal government should push legislation to expand the avenues for them to come here legally and allow employers and employees to come together in America.

A version of this article was originally published by the Southern California News Group.


Image Credit: Lindsey Nicholson / UCG / via Getty Images

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Agustina Vergara Cid

Agustina Vergara Cid, LLB and LLM, is an associate fellow at the Ayn Rand Institute and an opinion columnist at the Orange County Register.

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