日工抗议家得宝安装的噪音设备。
Day laborers protest noise machines installed at Home Depot

原始链接: https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2025-12-17/day-laborers-protest-noise-machines-home-depot

洛杉矶赛普拉斯公园的日工正在抗议当地家得宝安装的高音噪音机器,声称这是驱赶工人并恐吓移民社区的故意策略。这些机器在最近增加的冰上突袭行动后不久安装,包括一次带走一名带着幼儿的男子的拘留行动,它们发出刺耳的声音,导致头痛和恶心,工人需要佩戴耳塞。 IDEPSCA是一家支持日工的非营利组织,认为这些机器是一种骚扰行为,以及公司与移民执法部门的合作。家得宝声称这些设备是为了解决非法停车相关的卫生和安全问题,并非旨在阻止工人或协助冰上执法。然而,议员尤妮丝·埃尔南德斯称这些机器是“武器化的声音”,并强调家得宝对移民社区的依赖。 工人报告说,噪音加剧了就业机会减少和突袭造成的创伤带来的现有压力,而IDEPSCA承诺将继续成为社区的重要资源,尽管存在障碍和恐吓策略。该组织还在质疑这些机器放置在CalTrans土地上的合法性。

## 家得宝抗议与噪音机 一篇最近的《洛杉矶时报》文章引发了黑客新闻上关于家得宝日工抗议的讨论。抗议源于安装旨在阻止逗留的噪音机。 日工,通常是寻求快速修理工作的无证移民,传统上聚集在家得宝停车场。一些评论员认为家得宝试图通过阻止这种做法来避免冰冻突袭,而另一些人则认为该公司只是不喜欢工人们接近顾客。 争论延伸到噪音机本身,用户报告了与汽车“防盗”设备相似的高音嗡嗡声,并哀叹噪音污染日益严重。人们对家得宝使用 Flock 摄像头以及数据共享可能协助冰冻突袭表示担忧。一些人认为公司应该直接要求工人们离开,而另一些人则质疑噪音机是否违反噪音条例,以及其合法性和道德性。
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原文

A pair of blue and yellow earplugs dangle on Jose’s neck while he waits for work as a day laborer outside the Home Depot in Cypress Park.

They’ve been a necessity for laborers in the area since late November, when Home Depot installed three machines in the parking lot that emit a high-pitched tone. The noise, typically kept on all day, is a piercing sound that “penetrates your bones,” he said.

The Instituto de Educacion Popular del Sur de California, or IDEPSCA, a nonprofit that supports day laborers, held a news conference at Home Depot on Wednesday, calling for the company to remove the machines and vocalize opposition to the ICE raids taking place in its parking lots, part of a growing number of protests targeting corporate cooperation with immigration enforcement.

Home Depot locations nationwide have been a prime target for Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids under President Trump’s immigration crackdown. In early November, ICE agents detained a man at the Cypress Park location and then drove off with his toddler in the back of the vehicle.

About 50 people have been detained at the Cypress Park location this year, said Maegan Ortiz, IDEPSCA’s executive director. The machines are an attempt to push day laborers off its lots, she said.

The machines were turned off by the company during the news conference but were turned back on about an hour after it ended, according to workers. The noise is in earshot of IDEPSCA’s day laborer center, one of five operated by the organization that have supported workers for more than two decades.

“We have been here and remain open through global pandemics, providing services and creating community,” Ortiz said. “We’re not going to let sound machines, gates and intimidation get rid of us. Day laborers are here to stay. IDEPSCA is here to stay. The immigrant community is here to stay.”

Home Depot issued a press release Friday stating that the technology isn’t intended to deter day laborers or assist in immigration enforcement.

The noise devices were installed in response to sanitation and safety concerns at the location and “to deter and prevent illegal overnight parking and related issues. The noise devices are not in constant use – they are available to be deployed as needed,” according to the release.

Jose’s earplugs, which IDEPSCA provided to workers, help muffle the sound, but aren’t enough to completely mask it, he said. The noise causes workers headaches, nausea and dizziness, said Jose and Andres Salazar, the center’s site coordinator.

Salazar said the noise often follows him home, still ringing in his ears long after he’s left the parking lot.

The machines were installed only days after the latest raid at the location in late November, during which day laborers were taken and IDEPSCA staff members were harmed, Ortiz said.

The machines were installed on light posts in the parking lot situated directly under the 5 Freeway overpass. Hernandez and Ortiz said that portion of the parking lot is California Department of Transportation property and not owned by Home Depot. They urged the city to look into the machine installations.

Home Depot also installed yellow barriers that close off access to the parking lot near IDEPSCA’s day labor center, located at the corner of the Cypress Park location.

The machines and barriers were implemented at the Cypress Park location “to address the unique safety hazards at this specific site” due to its proximity to the CalTrans facility, and is not used in any other Los Angeles locations, the company said in its release.

“The measures taken at Cypress Park are standard property management tools used to maintain site safety and comply with local infrastructure requirements,” the release stated.

The machines are “a deliberate choice by a multibillion-dollar corporation that absolutely knew what it was doing and chose to weaponize sound literally,” said Councilwoman Eunisses Hernandez, who represents L.A. Council District 1. “Devices like these are used as torture against our people.”

Home Depot relies on immigrant and Latino communities, Hernandez said, including customers who shop inside, and day laborers, who seek work outside their storefronts.

The day laborer center is more than just a workplace, said Jose, who asked to withhold his last name for fear of retaliation by immigration agents. For many day laborers, it’s a second home, and for some, their only one. The center is bursting with greenery — plants that are cared for by the workers themselves.

“This space is something truly beautiful,” Jose said. “But, everything they’re doing with the noise and the barriers, it is affecting us. ... We’re here to help serve the community, not steal from the company.”

The noise is an added another layer of stress to day laborers, who are already struggling with less work opportunities and navigating lingering trauma from ICE raids. Jose was at the Home Depot when the last raid took place, only days before the company implemented the noise machines.

He watched in horror as co-workers were taken and volunteers were beaten.

“It made me angry, but I felt so impotent because, well, what do I do?” Jose said. “If I start fighting them, they’re going to knock me down, they’re going to take me.”

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