United States Informal day labor is not new to the United States, and day laborers are not always
migrant workers in many cases. In his study of day laborers in
Atlanta, Terry Easton interviews
white,
black, and
Hispanic workers. Many other metropolitan areas still have non-immigrant day laborers, and many other large and small cities have immigrant day laborers from a variety of countries, including
Mongolia,
Poland,
Russia,
Brazil, Central and South America, and countries in
Africa. Non-immigrant informal day labor, present in many cities, does not generate the controversy or calls to police and local government seen when immigrant day laborers gather to wait for work. The day labor workforce in the United States is overwhelmingly male (98%) and predominantly Latino. According to survey data by UCLA, 59% of day laborers were born in Mexico, 14% in Guatemala, and 8% in Honduras. Approximately 75% of these workers are undocumented, though 11% have pending legal status claims. Nonetheless, immigrants are a large source of day labor in the United States. Often, day labor work is in small residential
construction or landscaping. These workers earn, on average, $8–$10 an hour. The media and a 2005 study by
UCLA portrays day laborers as mostly being illegal immigrants from
Mexico and
Central America, Other research has found that day laborers are not typically illegal immigrants. Many are citizens of the US, and day labor is often a transition to full-time work. Unorganized day labor creates problems for day laborers: 1 in 3 corner day laborers have experienced theft of wages in the past two months and 1 in 5 experienced a serious worksite injury in the past year. Low wages and poor working conditions, employer abuse, and lack of insurance for work related accidents is common. In addition to wage theft, day laborers frequently report encountering unsafe working conditions without training, protective gear or access to medical care. A study by the National Lawyers Guild's Labor and Employment committee found that many workers fear retaliation or immigration consequences if they report injuries or unsafe conditions. Some municipalities and communities have supported workers' efforts to organize themselves into democratically run
workers' centers, designated areas, and
organizations to defend
workers' rights in general. Workers' Centers of this kind date back at least 18 years to
Los Angeles. Other municipalities have targeted day labor sites for aggressive enforcement of immigration laws. Though united in their commitment to the rights of
immigrant workers, NDLON and the Day Labor Research Institute represent different models of day labor center. NDLON represents the "social service agency model" and the Institute the "day laborer designed model." These different models of day labor centers may yield markedly different results that reflect the different goals of each model. and large numbers of day laborers drawn from other areas to the streets surrounding the centers. In the 19th and 20th centuries, day labor became predominantly agricultural. Swiss censuses reported 45,000 agricultural day laborers (including one-fifth women) in 1888 and 1900, about half as numerous as domestic servants on family farms. Their numbers declined rapidly through the 20th century due to mechanization and rural exodus to industrial employment: from nearly 15,000 in 1930 to fewer than 1,000 by 1970. Official figures understated the practice, as they excluded artisans and small farmers who worked seasonally for larger operations, mountain farmers who descended to the plains as itinerant workers, and others for whom day labor was not a primary occupation. In modern Swiss agriculture, day labor persists mainly for partially mechanized tasks and fruit harvesting. ==See also==