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Domestic workers lost a community in Pacific Palisades too
For over 12 years, Monica Vasquez made the trek from her home in South L.A. to her jobs in the Pacific Palisades. She started off as a nanny and later switched to cleaning houses.
To Vasquez, the families she worked for weren't just her patrones, or bosses.
“We don’t just go to work and leave,” Vasquez said in Spanish, adding that they share and connect over many things.
“There are people who put their trust in us and make us feel like family,” she said.
Domestic workers’ place in the economy
Vasquez is one of an unknown number of domestic workers out of work after the Palisades Fire wiped out homes and killed at least eight people. She said on Tuesday that five out of the seven homes she cleaned burned down, and the other two remain under evacuation orders.
Domestic workers — nannies, gardeners, attendants for older adults — are a huge part of the region’s economy. More than 100,000 of them work in L.A. County — many of them immigrants.
Eight out of 10 California domestic workers are people born outside of the country, according to a UCLA Labor Center report.
“They're always forgotten when it comes to resources, especially undocumented people,” said Odilia Romero, co-founder and executive director of Comunidades Indigenas en Liderazgo (CIELO), said.

CIELO is one of several organizations helping domestic workers in the aftermath of the L.A. fires, particularly by providing food boxes and translating crucial information into indigenous languages including Yucatec Maya, Ayutla Mixe and K’iche’ that derive from Mexico and Central America.
Mutual aid has been crucial for immigrant communities, as some may not be eligible for federal assistance.
President Joe Biden recently announced that L.A. fire victims could receive $770 through a FEMA application, but only some workers will be eligible for the payments. A FEMA criteria lists that green card holders, refugees, DACA recipients and others are "qualified non-citizens." It also notes that immigrants in mixed-status families with minors may be considered for funds.
“Without migrants, there is no way the economy we have in California will exist,” Romero said. Domestic workers are high-skilled essential workers, she added. “Imagine someone raising your child – it's not just anybody.”
The Palisades as neighborhood and workplace
Vasquez has built a network of clients over the dozen years she’s worked in the Palisades. She said all her jobs have been through referrals. As her client base of Palisades homes grew, so did her crew.
Vasquez employs her four “chicas,” mostly family members, including her daughter who uses her wages to help pay for college.
“Because of my referrals, I’ve been able to help many people find jobs,” she said. “I’ve helped my community.”
“People find love, they [find] forever friends, they eat together, they ride together,” Romero, from CIELO, said. “ It's such beautiful stories that these women, these men create in that part of our town.”
It’s also a part of town that has sustained Vasquez’s livelihood. She and her crew work on a cluster of homes, sometimes several in the same day. Without her Palisades work, she has only two other cleaning jobs in other parts of town.
All Vasquez wants to do is find work. She has family members depending on her and car payments and other bills stacking up.
Thankfully, she said, she has gotten texts about possibilities in other areas.
Still, “it’s going to be hard to start all over again,” she said.
Highlighting workers
Although Pacific Palisades wasn’t where Vasquez lived, the beach town was also her community. The same was true for Fernando Lopez’s family.
Lopez’s mother cleaned houses in the Palisades when he was growing up. Through her work, she was able to enroll him in school there.
Many of his friends’ homes, businesses and local landmarks were destroyed by the Palisades Fire, including his alma mater – Palisades High.
Lopez, who is co-owner of the L.A. restaurant Guelaguetza, quickly mobilized last week to help workers who “often get lost in the shadows” in moments of crisis, he said. He got the word out about a GoFundMe for domestic workers created in partnership with nonprofit organizations, including CIELO. And his restaurant and others will donate portions of their profits.
They’re almost at their $80,000 goal as of Thursday morning.
Resources for domestic workers
- Informal service workers (street vendor, gardener, housekeeper, caretaker, or other self-employed worker) who live or work in Council District 7 can apply here. Funding is provided by the council district and is first come first served.
- Small businesses or self employed people who make under 250,000 can apply to TMC Community Capital’s lottery program, which is funded by the Latino Community Foundation and others
- For indigenous communities: Contact CIELO at Info@mycielo.org or via their Instagram. / Para las comunidades indígenas: Póngase en contacto con CIELO en Info@mycielo.org o a través de su Instagram.
- For outdoor workers – street vendors, landscapers and recyclers: Apply to Inclusive Action’s emergency fund. / ara trabajadores al aire libre: vendedores ambulantes, paisajistas y recicladores: Solicite al fondo de emergencia de Acción Inclusiva.
- For Filipino workers: Contact Pilipino Workers Center at (213) 250-4353.
- For unemployed workers: Connect with L.A. County’s Department of Economic Opportunity services here. There is also a small grant for residents living in an area of the San Fernando Valley. / Para los trabajadores desempleados: Conecte con los servicios del Departamento de Oportunidades Económicas del condado de Los Ángeles aquí.
- For workers in the U.S. without authorization: You may qualify for public funds. Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA) has a fund and you can get more information by calling (888)-6-CHIRLA. / Para trabajadores en EE.UU. sin autorización: Es posible que pueda optar a fondos públicos. La Coalición por los Derechos Humanos de los Inmigrantes de Los Ángeles (CHIRLA) ha creado una guía en Instagram o llame al (888)-6-CHIRLA.
- The California Domestic Workers Coalition also launched a relief fund to help workers pay their rent and buy food. You can call them for more info (415) 625-3124.
- LAist has compiled a list of resources, though not all may be available to people of every immigration status. / LAist ha recopilado una lista de recursos, aunque puede que no todos estén disponibles para personas con cualquier estatus migratorio.
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