Donald Trump’s mass deportations and threats against federal disaster relief could decimate efforts to rebuild after wildfires and floods in multiple states, including some that backed the newly inaugurated president.
Thousands and thousands of homes have been destroyed or damaged across the U.S. by climate-fueled disasters in California, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Texas, and in each state recovery depends on restoration or resilience workers who travel from place to place cleaning up and rebuilding in hazardous conditions, reported The Guardian.
“Like farm workers in the fields, immigrants are indispensable to fire, flood and hurricane recovery in the US. There is absolutely no rebuilding without them,” said Saket Soni, director of Resilience Force, a labor organization with nearly 4,000 members.
“Mass deportations would completely upend the ongoing recovery in Florida, Louisiana and North Carolina from last year’s hurricanes, it would stall the rebuilding of LA after fires,” Soni added. “At this point, anyone anywhere is at risk of having their home impacted by a climate disaster. So everyone needs these skilled workers.”
The disaster industry is growing as extreme weather events increase in frequency and intensity, but Trump’s anti-immigration crackdown could decimate the resilience workforce made up of tens of thousands of mostly skilled, foreign-born workers from all over the world, and labor shortages could also disrupt the construction, food and hospitality industries.
“The deportations plan is so out of touch with the reality of the victims, who without immigrants will continue to spend months, maybe years in hotels living out of pocket,” Soni said. “Recovery often makes the poor even poorer and getting back into your home is the key safeguard against spiraling inequality.”
“We’re headed for a moment where there’ll be a reckoning between such political ploys and reality,” Soni added, “and at some point this will become a moral question rather than a political one.”
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“Mass deportations would completely upend the ongoing recovery in Florida, Louisiana and North Carolina from last year’s hurricanes, it would stall the rebuilding of LA after fires,” Soni added. “At this point, anyone anywhere is at risk of having their home impacted by a climate disaster. So everyone needs these skilled workers.”
The disaster industry is growing as extreme weather events increase in frequency and intensity, but Trump’s anti-immigration crackdown could decimate the resilience workforce made up of tens of thousands of mostly skilled, foreign-born workers from all over the world, and labor shortages could also disrupt the construction, food and hospitality industries.
“The deportations plan is so out of touch with the reality of the victims, who without immigrants will continue to spend months, maybe years in hotels living out of pocket,” Soni said. “Recovery often makes the poor even poorer and getting back into your home is the key safeguard against spiraling inequality.”
“We’re headed for a moment where there’ll be a reckoning between such political ploys and reality,” Soni added, “and at some point this will become a moral question rather than a political one.”

