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How Employers Can Support Undocumented Workers

September 10, 2025
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How Employers Can Support Undocumented Workers
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Undocumented workers are terrified right now. And so are the employers who depend on them.

President Donald Trump regained power alongside harsh anti-immigrant rhetoric. He’s promised mass deportations, expanded plans for nationwide raids, and uses local law enforcement as immigration enforcers. Immigrants and their employers remember what happened last time Trump was in office: ICE cracked down on immigrant workers in meatpacking plants, construction zones, and farm fields, often during business hours, and often with devastating effects.

For workers, these raids meant detention, family separation, and deportation. For employers, they meant abrupt labor shortages, and, in some cases, shuttered operations. Yet even in that hostile environment, the U.S. economy continued to rely on undocumented labor. It simply became quieter and less visible across nearly every sector.

Now in Trump’s second term, American employers can’t afford to pretend these workers don’t exist. Burying our heads in the sand won’t protect undocumented workers or the employers who will continue to rely on their labor, regardless of federal policy. 

From the construction site in California, to factory in Georgia, to the elder care facility in Maine, undocumented workers are already here, already contributing, and already holding up critical sectors of our economy. They’re not waiting in the wings to be added to the workforce—they are the workforce. What they lack is not motivation or merit. What they lack is safety in their workplaces.

This is where business leaders come in. Because when a system benefits from someone’s labor while denying them protection, that’s not just an ethical failure, it’s an operational liability. If you say you value inclusion, now is the moment to prove it. And if you say you believe in growing the American economy, now is the moment to prove it. Not with a statement, but with infrastructure which intentionally protects your most vulnerable workers, whether they have disclosed their immigration status or not.

Here is how employers could support undocumented workers right now: 

Create a silent support fund

Immigration emergencies—detentions, hearings, status renewals—can disrupt a worker’s life in an instant. Yet few companies offer support unless an employee discloses their situation. That’s problematic. Most undocumented workers can’t afford to self-identify.

A silent support fund can provide confidential, judgment-free financial relief to workers experiencing hardship, without requiring disclosure. Employers should frame this fund broadly (supporting employees and families in crisis), allow anonymous requests, and skip invasive approval processes. This isn’t charity, it’s contingency planning that protects both people and operations.

Train managers to lead without needing proof

Second, all employers should prepare their managers for how to approach immigration issues in advance. Don’t wait for someone to say, “I’m undocumented and I need help.” That day might never come. Instead, train managers to assume that immigration-related stress exists on their team and equip them with language to offer support without requiring personal disclosures. When people feel safe, they contribute more fully. 

Expand emergency leave policies

One practical thing that all teams can do to ensure that immigrant workers have the flexibility they need is to expand their emergency leave policies. 

Immigration events aren’t always predictable, but they are real: urgent hearings, family detainments, unexpected travel to consulates. If your company offers emergency leave for bereavement or illness but not immigration, your policies are not inclusive. And if your employees have to choose between job security and showing up for their family? That’s inhumane and a policy failure.

Redefine inclusion to include immigration justice

You can’t call yourself an inclusive employer if your benefits, protections, or policies exclude those workers who are most at risk. Inclusion isn’t just about who’s in the room, it’s also about who the room was built for. Ask yourself:

  • Who are we overlooking because they haven’t (or can’t) self-identify?
  • What assumptions are we making about whose lives matter in our policies?
  • Are we building systems for people with full legal protections, or for real people with real needs?

Inclusion that only protects the privileged is comfort masquerading as courage. 

Let’s be clear: none of these actions requires breaking the law. Employers can and should build systems of care that don’t depend on someone outing themselves as undocumented to “deserve” protection. 

If you’re a business leader, you don’t need to march at a protest to make a difference. But you do need to act, before the knock comes at your employee’s door, and before fear erodes the trust you’ve worked so hard to build.

Don’t wait for someone to raise their hand for help. Build a workplace that doesn’t require them to.

The post How Employers Can Support Undocumented Workers appeared first on TIME.

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