Duped in Texas, came to Florida for cleanup, foiled again
Miami Herald
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Pedro Escalona endured a grueling journey from Venezuela to Texas, made a brief stopover at a San Antonio migrant center, crossed paths with an operative of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis one who promised a free charter flight to Delaware then learned the flight had been scuttled and caught a plane to New York City, where he ended up in a homeless shelter.
And now, days later, he sat forlornly on a bench in Doral, Florida, outside a Best Western, contemplating lifes odd twists. The company he had been working for had fired him, kicking him and three others out of the hotel room they had been staying in for a week. He had spent the night before on the grass of the hotel under a palm tree.
Escalona, 24, was angry and mostly broke, save for a check he could not cash the fruits of an exhausting week of labor on a hurricane-recovery work crew.
How he got to Florida the state that wanted to dump him and others in Delaware, apparently to embarrass President Joe Biden, who has a home there and onto a seven-day-a-week Fort Myers work crew is the story of Americas conflicted relationship with migrant workers.
One week they are demonized, the next they are in demand, only to become an expendable part of a workforce hired by companies that profit off vulnerable laborers. The company had promised him three months of work, Escalona said, only to pull the plug after one week for something that, to Escalona, felt arbitrary and personal. When the company fired Escalona, they painted him and his group as troublemakers. There had been some incidents, Escalona admitted.
Although the company called the dispute with Escalona an isolated incident, the Herald spoke to five other migrants in the week since who described similar situations: hard work and long hours on hurricane clean up, followed by allegations of bad behavior, a final paycheck that they couldnt cash, then abrupt removal from the hotel sometimes at the hands of police.