Support for LAist comes from
Audience-funded nonprofit news
Stay Connected
Audience-funded nonprofit news
Listen

The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • The L.A. Report
    Listen 4:59
    CA reaction to federal election monitors plan, ExxonMobil sues CA, Irvine gets all-electric hospital— Morning Edition
Jump to a story
  • ICE sweeps leave party stores without customers
    A party store from the outside, full of colorful piñatas hanging from the ceiling.
    Immigration enforcement in L.A. has hit downtown's Pinata District hard, including at Party Time and Candies, where one longtime employee says workers are taking a risk just by going to work.

    Topline:

    The Piñata District, once packed with families eating and shopping together on weekends, is now empty, and are businesses seeing a significant decline in sales. “A party is now a luxury,” said a worker at a party store.

    Party slump: Hugo Beltrán, an employee from La Dulcería, a party store, said sales had dropped more than 90%. Their entire customer base is Latino — and parties are the last thing on people’s minds.

    Economic impact: On a recent visit, most people in the area were employees unloading merchandise. “We don’t have income from other sources, and we are taking a risk by coming to work,” one said.

    Read on ... for more from the Piñata District.

    Just east of the Fashion District in downtown L.A., in a riot of color and shape and texture, the Piñata District on Olympic Boulevard sells everything you could need for a vibrant party.

    But now, amid ongoing ICE sweeps, the goods are still there, but the customers are not.

    On a recent visit, most people in the area were employees unloading merchandise. Talking to vendors was difficult — they were either too scared to speak or too short-staffed to stop and chat.

    Nini Santoyo, owner of El Cora Productos, imports merchandise from small towns all over Mexico. She says businesses in the Piñata District have seen a large drop in sales. “You see how lonely it is? There's no cars; there's no people walking," Santoyo said. "It is dead.”

    "Everybody's really scared of coming,” she said.

    Hugo Beltrán, who works at La Dulcería, said sales had dropped more than 90%. His shop's entire customer base is Latino — and parties are the last thing on people’s minds.

    “A party is now a luxury,” Beltrán said.

    Santoyo said this moment is worse than COVID, because at least then, “people were still gathering at home. Now nobody’s doing anything.”

    Cars are parked on both sides of a street, a wooden crate behind one of them. Power lines and store signs are visible in the background.
    The Piñata District on East Olympic Boulevard is quiet on a recent day.
    (
    Karen Mariana Cardenas Ceballos
    /
    LAist
    )

    She’s had to adapt to different strategies, including creating an online store. But she says shipping is difficult because a lot of their merchandise is fragile. “There is a loss right there too,” she said. “If something breaks, we also lose.”

    She's started doing videos on social media showing the merchandise they have as a sales strategy. “But it's not the same [as] when you get everybody coming here, back in the day,” she sighed.

    Daniel Morales, who works at Party Time and Candies, said they’ve even lowered their prices — but despite that, people still aren't coming. “People stopped doing events, parties, many things, because they don’t want to be affected,” Morales said.

    His coworker, Angela Flores, who has worked at the business for 14 years, wants to encourage people to visit and experience what the Piñata District offers.

    “Come and support us by buying candy, piñatas," she said. "We need the job. We have families. We have to pay for our things. Sometimes we don’t have enough."

    “We don’t have income from other sources, and we are taking a risk by coming to work.”

    Angel Calle, owner of Miches Trakas, sells micheladas, palomas, mojitos and capirinhas while playing music from Mexico, Venezuela, Puerto Rico and Colombia.

    With the ICE sweeps affecting business, he figured out a different sales strategy. He converted his truck to the "Trakas mobile" and now takes his drinks — and music — to people who might be afraid to go out, at no extra charge.

    “What they pay here, they can pay from their home as well,” Calle said. He figures if he can't bring customers to him, he can bring the experience of being at his stand to them — and some enjoyment at a difficult time.

Loading...