[Excerpt from Hartford Courant article by Livi Stanford, 7/14/25]

State officials and immigration advocates are warning that President Donald Trump’s continued plan to deliver the “single largest mass deportation program in history” will severely impact Connecticut’s economy, resulting in the loss of thousands of  jobs because immigrants are as a critical contributor.

Art Feltman, executive director of International Hartford, a nonprofit focused on the creation of jobs in Hartford for immigrants and refugees, said that if immigrants leave the state, the regional economy will “shrink.”

“So many people think that because they are native born that this is someone else’s problem,” he said. “It is going to be their problem as consumers and taxpayers. All these businesses are paying state and local taxes. Their taxes will go up. If you take the engine of the economy, the growing sector, the growing startups and you take them out of the economy, you are left with no growth.”

Feltman continued: “The potential effect on the economy is staggering. It can’t be measured. The Trump Administration is not just going after undocumented. It is going after anybody that is dark skinned. They don’t like them unless they are citizens.”

The loss of immigrant businesses would be felt in day to day life, Feltman explained.

“You may want to go down and have a nice Asian meal and the restaurant is closed,” Feltman said. “You may want to go to the dry cleaner and the dry cleaner is closed and you may want to go to the neighborhood market and find the market is closed.”

Immigrants in Connecticut own 26% of the state’s businesses and comprise 30% of all startups in the state, according to Feltman.

DataHaven reported that those businesses contribute an estimated $1.6 billion to the state’s economy.

Immigrant-led households in Connecticut paid an estimated $5.8 billion in federal taxes and $3.3 billion in state and local taxes, according to DataHaven.

“Undocumented immigrants in Connecticut are estimated to have paid $636 million in federal taxes and $371 million in state and local taxes,” DataHaven reported.

Immigrants own and work in businesses constitute a significant sector of the economy in areas such as health care, construction, restaurants and retail, immigrant advocates said.

Among immigrant entrepreneurs, of whom there are 47,400 in the state, approximately 22,184 or 46% have either revocable or no status and are therefore at risk of deportation, according to Feltman.

“Almost half of immigrants in the state are vulnerable,” he said.

Daniel O’Keefe, the state’s commissioner of the Department of Economic and Community Development, said immigrants are “a big part of our entire entrepreneurial ecosystem and a big part of our innovation ecosystem.”

O’Keefe added that “it saddens me to see how amplified this has become.”

“To now turn this into a thing where fear is spreading in societies — that is not who we are,” he said. “It is not who we aspire to be. I don’t believe that is what voters want and that is a mistake. Connecticut is a place where we want you to come and contribute and we want you to feel safe here.”

Overall, immigration experts and economists say that immigrants are not taking the jobs of Americans except in extremely limited circumstances.

Maria Matos, president and chief programming officer for Latinos for Educational Advocacy and Diversity, with offices in Bridgeport, Danbury, New Britain, New Haven, Norwich, East Hartford and Waterbury, said businesses large and small are feeling the impact of Trump’s deportation threats.

“Even well-known local Latino supermarket chains have shared how their operations are being affected,” she said. “Restaurants are seeing fewer workers and customers. Hospitals, too, are experiencing staffing challenges that impact their daily activities.”

Last month state immigration advocates warned that arrests of undocumented immigrants were ramping up in the state, creating anxiety and fear in communities with people taken every day.

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The American Immigration Council reported that immigrants make up 19.5% of the state’s labor force and they account for “22.7% of STEM workers and 38.1% of health aides in the state.”

In a May report, DataHaven and The Connecticut Immigrant Support Network wrote that “policies that deter immigration, including those targeted at people who are legally authorized to work in the U.S. will harm the Connecticut economy.”

“In particular, deporting undocumented immigrants, who comprise 3% of Connecticut’s total population (about 117,000 people), would potentially wipe out tens of thousands of jobs, given that 87% of these immigrants are working age,” the report said. “Health and child care fields would be severely disrupted, as immigrants comprise 22% of all early childhood education workers in Connecticut and 38% of all health aides in the state.”

The report went on further to state that worker “shortages can lead to higher costs for goods and services, with one estimate finding that prices would rise by 9% nationally if several million people were removed from the labor force.”

New Haven Mayor Justin Elicker said that “literally in every community block of the city there is a business that is immigrant owned.”

“Our immigrant community makes our city and economy much stronger,” he said. “People bring different cultures to New Haven that we can benefit from. New Haven is the culture capital of Connecticut.”

Waterbury Mayor Paul Pernerewski Jr. described Waterbury as the “city of immigrants,” explaining that it has always been this way. He said while he could not quantify the percentages of businesses owned by immigrants, he noted it is significant.

“A lot of the small businesses and stores and some of the smaller restaurants are run by immigrants,” he said.

Sheila Hayre, clinical professor of law at Quinnipiac University and director of the Civil Justice Clinic, said under the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 in part due to “pressure from business interests, Congress declined to make it a criminal offense for undocumented individuals to work without authorization, though it did make it unlawful for employers to hire workers who are not legally authorized to work.

“This reflects the general agreement that the U.S. economy depends on, benefits from, and grows because of immigrants,” she said. “Putting aside whether the mass deportation is achievable, mass deportation would be catastrophic to the American economy.”

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Link:
https://www.courant.com/2025/07/14/trump-deportation-plan-could-be-devastating-to-ct-economy-experts-say-immigrants-expand-the-pie/