KCK party store’s sales plummet because of ICE fears; It’s not the only business slowed by the crackdown
July 30, 2025 | Frank Morris
Editor’s note: The following story was published by KCUR, Kansas City’s NPR member station, and a fellow member of the KC Media Collective. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for KCUR’s email newsletter.
President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown has many recent immigrants terrified, hunkering down and holding onto their money; That new fear and frugality is crushing small, mom-and-pop businesses in some immigrant-heavy business corridors, like KCK’s Central Avenue, just as new tariffs are raising the prices of many products that recent immigrants buy
Undocumented immigrants wield about $300 billion in buying power, according to the American Immigration Council. They spend a lot of it at stores along streets like Central Avenue in Kansas City, Kansas, which, until recently, made it a good place to open a small business.
“We chose the place because we saw it was a busy place,” Lucy Angle said from behind the counter of her new party supply store on Central Ave. “But right now it’s just not like we saw it. Central Avenue is really slow.”

Lucy Angle selected this storefront for her party shop last year, before the Trump Administration’s immigration crackdown, when Central Avenue was busier; photo by Frank Morris, KCUR
Angle’s small shop, Dulceria Sinai, is a riot of color. Huge, cheerful-looking bags of candy vie for attention with smiling, cartoon-character piñatas. The place is packed with merchandise, but the customers that Angle imagined when she decided to open the store a year ago are not here. She says the Trump Administration’s immigration crackdown traumatized her clientele.
“You can feel it,” said Angle. “And hopefully, people, they’re gonna start making their parties. But they’re not making anything.”
RELATED: At least 3 released after immigration raids at restaurants in Lenexa, KCK
Her story is common up and down Central Avenue, said Edgar Galicia, executive director of the Central Area Betterment Association.
“All of them, all of them have reported loss in sales,” he said. ”Once the witch hunt started, everybody’s afraid. Nobody wants to come out.”
Shops, restaurants, and professional offices along Central Avenue report a 30% to 60% plunge in revenue, he said.
When shoppers do venture out, they’re often confronted with higher prices, because many of the products recent immigrants buy are imported from their home countries, and now subject to tariffs.
“Right now, we feel attacked, because not only are they going after our people, they increase our prices, tariffs increase our prices,” Galicia said.

Oredi Jay, owner of Jay’s Restaurant and Grocery on Independence Avenue, worries he’ll have to lay off more employees because tariffs are raising his costs while the immigration crackdown is scaring away customers; photo by Frank Morris, KCUR
The business crisis in Kansas City, Kansas, echoes across the country, Galicia said.
“From New York to LA, from the state of Washington to Florida, up north, down south, everywhere this is happening,” Galicia said.
Big companies like Coca-Cola and Constellation Brands report that their Hispanic customers are withholding some of their $2 trillion in spending power.
“What you’re seeing here is these big companies experiencing this across lots and lots of markets at a sufficient enough level for them to put it in their shareholder statements,” said Eric Rodriguez, Senior Vice President of Latino civil rights organization Unidos US. “What happens economically to the Latino community happens to the country.”
And Latinos aren’t the only immigrant group affected.
“People are not willing to spend money, which is bad for the economy,” said Oredi Jay, an immigrant from the Democratic Republic of Congo, who runs Jay’s Restaurant and Grocery on Independence Avenue in Kansas City, Missouri.
Jay caters primarily to immigrants from central Africa. He’s watched his sales plummet by half this year, because his customers are nervous and his prices have spiked.
“American-first policies or agenda like the tariff is impacting our business negatively, for sure, since as an immigrant, as a refugee, we import a lot of food abroad,” said Jay.
The fish in freezers lining a wall of Jay’s store, for instance. A throw pillow-sized bag of dried sardines imported from Tanzania used to retail for $25. Jay said he now needs $35 for the same bag to turn a profit. The housewares he brings in from China are more expensive now, too. Trump’s tariffs currently tack on another 30% to his cost.
Jay has already lost two employees since the beginning of the year. He said he will be forced to lay off two more workers if sales stay down.

Auto repair shop owner Danery Berrios says a 40% drop in business has forced him to lay off two of his mechanics, and he worries immigration agents will stop him from returning to the U.S. after his upcoming mandatory immigration interview in Honduras; photo by Frank Morris, KCUR
Many immigrant business owners face a threat to their livelihoods even more acute than fast-rising prices and falling sales.
At Danery Berrios’ auto repair shop in Kansas City, Kansas, business is down 40% and falling. He’s had to lay off two of his three mechanics, and fears he’ll lose the business entirely.
He needs to complete an immigration interview at the U.S. embassy in his native Honduras this summer, and doesn’t like his odds of being allowed to return to the U.S. afterwards.
“I don’t know. I mean, I don’t know. 50% chance, as 50/50,” said Berrios, in his shop. “I can do nothing about this, like I don’t have control about this.”
And things may get much worse for immigrant businesses. Rodriguez said Trump’s mass deportation drive is just ramping up.
“The government immigration enforcement agencies still don’t have the resources they need to do it on the scale that they propose to do it,” said Rodriguez. “That’s coming.”

Edgar Galicia, Executive Director of the Central Area Betterment Association, says Central Avenue has been gradually improving for 40 years, but has recently taken a hit from immigration policies and tariffs; photo by Frank Morris, KCUR
Trump’s sprawling domestic policy bill, approved this month, will spend about $170 billion curtailing immigration with a goal of deporting record numbers of people from the U.S.
All that spending is likely to stoke more fear, keeping workers and shoppers at home and starving mom-and-pop businesses.
“I believe this is worse than the pandemic,” said Galicia. “Because even though the uncertainty during the pandemic was enormous and the fear was enormous, your emotionality was in control because you didn’t have anyone hunting you.”
Galicia fears that Trump’s immigration crackdown will leave long-lasting scars on Central Avenue.
“It’s this whole bunch of things happening that are destroying our way of life, destroying the stability we have built on our own, destroying the life-long investment that has been put into this place,” said Galicia.

2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Pitch competition at GEW Topeka puts $38K on the line for women, entrepreneurs of color
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. TOPEKA — Building an equitable business community in Shawnee County is critical to economic development in and around the state’s capital city, said Glenda Washington. A pitch competition slated for…
KC lawmakers backing legislation to boost re-entry for veterans becoming entrepreneurs
Veterans who return to the workforce as entrepreneurs face unique challenges when exiting full-time military life, said Brian Newton. A bipartisan push by two members of Kansas City’s delegation to the U.S. House could ease the transition for veterans-turned-small business owners. “My father was a career Marine and I served for a decade myself, with…
PayIt on board the Harriet II, Montgomery Zoo; new portal offers ticketing for popular local attractions
A new digital platform designed by Kansas City-based PayIt not only provides improved interactions between residents of Montgomery, Alabama, and their local city government — the tool also offers ticket sales for some of the region’s most popular tourist attractions. PayIt — with headquarters in downtown Kansas City’s lightwell building — already boasts partnerships with…
These three KC startup founders are jumping into the Dolphin Tank, hoping to swim with the unicorns
When the Dolphin Tank pitch showcase sinks its teeth into a market like Kansas City, the goal is to accelerate women-led tech companies to a national level, said Rachel Rong. “Our mission is to build out the ecosystem and support women entrepreneurs in Kansas City,” said Rong, the director of operations for Springboard Enterprises, which…
