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Border travel restrictions mean bleak holiday season for retailers who rely on shoppers from Mexico

Outlet Shoppes of El Paso
Angela Kocherga
/
KTEP News

EL PASO --Twinkling holiday lights cast a warm glow and Christmas carols blare from speakers at the Outlet Shoppes of El Paso. But in these pandemic times, something is missing from the traditional holiday scene on the border: shoppers from Mexico.  

 

“Yeah, it has affected us. Normally this time of year it’s a little more packed in the mall and everything,” said Lawnie Lazalde, a employee of Mr. C’s Toys,  a local business with a kiosk in this open-air mall. This time of year, he and his coworker should be busy as Santa’s elves selling the hottest toys. “We got baby Yoda, like Mickey Mouse, Sonic the Hedgehog,” he said pointing to the shelves.

 

Lawnie Lazalde at Mr. C's Toys
Credit Angela Kocherga / KTEP News
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KTEP News
Lawnie Lazalde works at Mr.C's Toys, a local business with a kiosk at the Outlet Shoppes of El Paso.

Pre-COVID-19, he estimates Mexican shoppers accounted for half of Mr. C’s Toys sales. The pandemic is ravaging economies on both sides of the border during the most critical time for retailers, the holidays. 

 

University of Texas at El Paso economics professor and Trade in the America’s Chair Tom Fullerton estimates shoppers from Mexico account for $1 billion in annual retail activity. “There are large figures occurring in Laredo, McAllen and Brownsville as well,” he said. 

 

“Casual day trips across the border into Texas are not occurring in 2020,” said Fullerton.  The losses will have consequences in the new year. “There are going to be a greater number of retail business closures in January than is usually the case in El Paso,” Fullerton said. That will also raise unemployment above what generally happens seasonally after the holidays according to Fullerton.

 

The impact of Mexican shoppers is evident in the Borderplex Economic Outlook to 2021report authored by Fullerton. The total pedestrian border crossings into El Paso were projected to reach nearly 7.5 million and total personal vehicle crossings were forecast to exceed 11.8 million before the pandemic.

 

But pandemic travel restrictions imposed under an agreement by the U.S. and Mexican governments in March and extended through January 21st have led to a virtual shutdown of the border most of this year. Travel restrictions at land border crossings are allowed only for essential reasons including medical appointments, academic activities and work. Shopping is not on the list. 

 

That’s translated into a bleak Christmas for El Paso retailers who traditionally rely on shoppers from Mexico. The impact is evident at the Outlet Shoppes of El Paso. Normally, there’s an overflow parking lot full of vehicles with license plates from Chihuahua, Durango, Coahuila and other states in northern Mexico during the busy holiday season that runs through Three Kings Day January 6th in Mexico.

 

Herlinda Santillana shopping in South El Paso
Credit Angela Kocherga / KTEP News
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KTEP News
Herlinda Santillana shops in south El Paso using video chat to show her granddaughter in Torreon boots. Her relatives cannot cross the border because of pandemic travel restrictions.

  

South El Paso street depends heavily on Mexican shoppers who walk across. These days there’s some incidental shopping by Mexican citizens who pick up a few things while in El Paso for essential reasons.

 

Others rely on relatives who live on the Texas side like Herinda Santillana. On a recent Saturday the Fabens resident was shopping with her granddaughter over video chat. She used her phone to show the young woman different styles of boots on sale at a south El Paso store just a block from the international bridge.

                                                                                                         

“Are these good?” asked Santillana. “No,” replied her granddaughter. “How about these?” Santillana waved her phone over a half a dozen different boots before her granddaughter saw a pair she liked. “They only have that style in one color,” she told her after inquiring with a salesclerk.

 

The picky granddaughter on the other line of phone was in Torreon, nearly 600 miles south of the Texas-Mexico border. As a legal resident, Santillana can still go back and forth to Mexico since U.S. citizens and legal residents can’t be stopped from returning home, but her relatives in Mexico cannot visit El Paso.

 

“A lot of my family can’t come across right now. They can’t come to buy anything,” she said before resuming her search for the perfect pair of boots at the right price.  The travel restrictions hurt the budgets of Mexican families who bargain shop in the U.S. for clothing and other items. 

 

On the Mexican side of the border, the economic picture is even worse. Just across the Paso del Norte international bridge on Avenida Juarez, the shops and street vendors that cater to visitors from Texas are hurting.

 

Alberto Moreno table cloth vendor
Credit Angela Kocherga / KTEP News
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KTEP News
Alberto Moreno sells his hand-woven tablecloths in Ciudad Juarez. The street vendor on Avenida Juarez says sales have plummeted since the pandemic border travel restrictions have kept people from the Texas side from visiting Mexico.

  

“There ‘s nothing. No sales,” says Alberto Moreno, a roving street vendor. He wears a face mask that looks like a small Mexican flag and carries beautiful hand-woven tablecloths -- usually big sellers for holiday gatherings. He estimates sales are down by as much as 90 percent.  

U.S. citizens can cross into Mexico for essential reasons, but again not for shopping. A lot of small vendors are hanging by a thread.  “Either I die from the virus or I die of hunger,” said Maria Velasquez. She sells snacks from a small baby stroller she uses as a cart. 

 

 

Maria Velasquez Juarez snack vendor
Credit Angela Kocherga / KTEP News
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KTEP News
Maria Velasquez sells snacks from a cart on Avenida Juarez. She's among street vendors in Ciudad Juarez struggling to make a living while border pandemic travel restrictions are in place.

  

 

If she doesn’t work, her family doesn’t eat, she said. Velasquez is grateful she is able to work another day and relies on her faith to keep going.

 

“It’s tough. God will have to help all of us,” she said.

  

 

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