L.A. Now Live: 1 in 10 L.A. County residents are in U.S. illegally
One in 10 Los Angeles County residents is an immigrant living in the country illegally, according to a study released Tuesday by the USC Center for the Study of Immigrant Integration.
Join us at 9 a.m. Wednesday as we discuss the study’s findings with Times reporter Cindy Chang.
Many of those immigrants have been in the country for more than a decade and are the parents of children who are American citizens, the study found. One in five children in Los Angeles County has at least one parent who is in the country without proper documentation.
One in four of the estimated 11 million people said to be in the United States without legal authorization lives in California. Statewide, the study estimates that about 7% of residents, or more than 2.6 million people, are in the country illegally.
That means the stakes for California are particularly high as Congress debates immigration reform, including the possibility of a mass legalization.
In Los Angeles County, 63% of unauthorized immigrants are from Mexico and 22% are from Central America, according to the study. Eight percent are from the Philippines, Korea or China.
In the Bay Area, the percentage of Asians in the unauthorized population is much higher, at 23%.
Immigrants residing in Los Angeles County illegally make a median wage of $18,000 a year, compared with $47,000 for U.S.-born residents. Only 33% have health insurance, the researchers found.
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