Wednesday night at the site of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge on the Patapsco River in Baltimore. The six men on the span at the time who are confirmed or feared to be dead were immigrants. Jonathan Newton for The Washington Post

Does America need a more searing visual image than eight men working for their piece of the American dream — filling potholes on a terrifying bridge in 1 a.m. darkness — to understand that our nation was built by immigrants, runs on immigrant labor and needs immigrants?

Six of those men, migrants from Mexico and Central America, pierced our consciousness this week because they plunged into the Patapsco River when a Singapore-flagged cargo ship razed Baltimore’s mighty Francis Scott Key Bridge.

Social media was a lovefest of thoughts and prayers for those men.

“Pray for the souls of those construction workers!”

“Please pray for the missing construction workers and their families.”

“These people are heroes.”

Advertisement

But when it comes to the reality of who these workers were, how they got here and why they came, more than half of us lose our minds — and our hearts.

A disconcerting 61% of Americans see illegal immigration as a “very serious” problem, according a poll by Monmouth University last month. More than half of the poll’s respondents said they support building a border wall.

Must be an election year.

The fact is, the kind of men who were on that bridge are doing this every day across the nation — the work that needs to be done. Dangerous work.

While foreign-born “Hispanic or Latino” immigrants made up 8.2% of the workforce in 2021, they accounted for 14% of work-related deaths that year, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

“Fatal injuries to this group were more prevalent in the field of construction, with falls, slips and trips being the most frequent event leading to death,” according to a report by the agency.

Advertisement

During Mass on Tuesday at the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen in Baltimore, a song is performed for people impacted by the Francis Scott Key Bridge’s collapse. One of the men feared dead, originally from Honduras, was described by his brother as having a strong work ethic. André Chung for The Washington Post

Our culture honors — with big gestures — the dangers that law enforcement officers face in the line of duty every day. But their work is the 22nd-most dangerous profession in America, according to a different analysis by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Policing is far behind the occupations of landscaping, roofing, farming, construction, garbage collection and maintaining the nation’s highways — all jobs widely filled by immigrants.

This has largely been the story of America. While our nation’s immigrants are senators, doctors, lawyers and professors, many more start their American lives in jobs that literally build the nation. From the Transcontinental Railroad to the New York skyline and the Golden Gate Bridge, a world of immigrants arrived and built upon the forced labor of the enslaved.

“If we ever closed the door to new Americans, our leadership in the world would soon be lost,” President Ronald Reagan said in a 1989 speech.

And yet, we did close those doors many times, then cringed at what we saw in the rearview mirror:

The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 (restricting Chinese immigrants). California’s Alien Land Laws of 1913 (targeting Japanese immigrants). The Asiatic Barred Zone Act of 1917 (barring all migrants from a zone stretching from the Middle East to Southeast Asia and including a literacy test designed to foil immigrants from Europe). The Undesirable Aliens Act of 1929 (targeting Mexican migrants). The Tydings-McDuffie Act of 1934 (this one’s for Filipino immigrants.)

I can keep going.

Advertisement

But each time, the restrictions — born of fear mongering and jingoistic propaganda — eventually fell. And not always because we reset our moral compass to the noble principles of Emma Lazarus on the Statue of Liberty or speeches by Reagan, but because America needs immigrants.

It’s what makes the most recent surge of anti-immigration sentiment so face-palming.

We are in the middle of a stunning worker shortage.

Gasped at your grocery bill?

Surprised by the reduced hours at your local businesses?

Having a hard time finding a health-care provider?

Advertisement

“We hear every day from our member companies — of every size and industry, across nearly every state — that they’re facing unprecedented challenges trying to find enough workers to fill open jobs,” the U.S. Chamber of Commerce said last month.

The pandemic and boomer retirement has something to do with this, but the most glaring factor is a decline in migration that’s lasted nearly a decade, the chamber folks said.

Maynor Suazo Sandoval, a native of Honduras, is among the men feared dead in the bridge collapse. Suazo Sandoval family photo

We simply haven’t had enough people like Maynor Suazo Sandoval, 38, one of the bridge workers presumed dead.

He was the youngest of eight kids born in the mountains of Honduras before coming to Maryland to work in the construction business 18 years ago.

He married and had kids, loved soccer and called his family in Honduras for every event, his network back in Honduras told The Washington Post.

He eventually built his own package delivery company, adding to the $19.5 billion in taxes that immigrants in the Washington region contributed to the economy. When his business faltered during the pandemic, he went back into construction, and onto that bridge.

“He always told us that you had to triple your effort to get ahead,” his brother said. “He said it didn’t matter what time or where the job was, you had to be where the work was.”

Copy the Story Link

Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.