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The first time Rosa saw snowflakes falling, she thought they were pieces of cotton. “I thought I was going to choke,” she told me. 

Rosa, who is from Honduras, had never seen snow before, but it’s become a familiar sight now that she’s living in Bozeman, Montana. The city, population about 56,000, is ringed by four mountain ranges in the Northern Rockies. It took her a while, but Rosa has learned to deal with the weather. “Now I think it’s very pretty,” she said in Spanish. “Our kids love to play in the snow.” 

Rosa, who has a round, serious face and long black hair, is one of the hundreds of thousands of Hondurans who have been displaced in recent years by a variety of problems: political corruption, gang violence, economic stagnation and environmental catastrophe. In 2020, when gang members threatened to kill her, she abruptly fled the country with her youngest daughter. 

Rosa’s husband, Luis, had already gone to the U.S. with their older girl and found his way to Bozeman, drawn by the promise of available jobs. “I had a friend here, and he told me that this place was good for finding work,” he said. (Rosa and Luis, who are both undocumented, requested that their names be withheld for their safety. The names of all the immigrants quoted in this story have been changed.) 

Twenty, even 10, years ago, Bozeman — far from the U.S.-Mexico border and overwhelmingly white — would not have been an obvious destination for a Central American family. One Mexican construction worker who moved here from Colorado in the mid-2000s told me that he used to walk the aisles of the local Walmart and hear only English. That is no longer the case, he said. 

Southwestern Montana is in the middle of a massive multi-year economic explosion, propelled by a surge of wealthy people, a multibillion-dollar tech industry, and, especially, a luxury real-estate market that continues to soar to new heights. In February, the median price for a house in Bozeman surpassed $1 million. The resulting demand for construction workers drew people like Luis to Bozeman. Luis, a poker-faced man with a small patch of beard, has as much work as he can handle these days: framing houses, putting up siding and roofing — the most dangerous job and his least favorite. 

Tina Visscher, a longtime Bozeman resident, became aware of Bozeman’s growing immigrant population in 2019 at a Quaker meeting. Someone mentioned that the Bozeman public schools were dealing with an increasing number of Spanish-speaking students. Visscher decided to get involved. “The first thing we did was buy a bunch of coats and boots, because they were all freezing,” she said.

A new apartment complex under construction in Bozeman, Montana’s Valley West area.
A new apartment complex under construction in Bozeman, Montana’s Valley West area. Credit: Will Warasila/High Country News

Help of many kinds was needed, and Visscher, a retired psychotherapist, soon found herself serving as the director of a small but rapidly growing nonprofit. Today, Bienvenidos is Bozeman’s largest and most prominent immigrant aid group, helping new arrivals with housing, transportation, legal services and more. 

“They’re coming here because there’s work building the houses for the millionaires,” she said.

MOST CITIES CHANGE SLOWLY, their evolution almost imperceptible. Bozeman’s remaking has been sudden and striking. Its population has increased by more than 50% since 2010, and it’s been one of the fastest-growing small cities in the country for the last few years. As a college town near the mountains, Bozeman has long been an attractive destination, with all the attendant affordability concerns. But it was also a place that had affordable working-class neighborhoods, as well as cheap rentals for seasonal Forest Service employees and ski-hill workers who commuted to the nearby resorts. 

Today, Bozeman has been transformed. Sleek modern developments with glassed-in sitting rooms rise on a lot occupied, less than a year before, by a rusting warehouse. On Bozeman’s outskirts, cramped subdivisions line both sides of a highway on what, until recently, was open farmland. Dozens of tech, bio-tech and software companies are headquartered here. Well-to-do people, many of them remote workers, have poured into Bozeman and Gallatin County, often drawn by what real-estate ads call the “lifestyle” attractions of southwestern Montana: accessible public lands, mountain vistas, Yellowstone National Park and fly fishing. On the way to Yellowstone, about an hourfrom Bozeman, is Big Sky, a picturesque mountain town, home to great skiing and the Yellowstone Club, whose members include some of the world’s richest people, including Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg and Eric Schmidt. Bozeman’s identity as the Mountain West’s hot new destination has been written up in The Wall Street Journal, Time and The New York Times

But this view of Bozeman ignores the hidden impacts of the city’s newfound economic might. The well-off people who move to Bozeman from California, Texas and the East Coast want the amenities they had in the ZIP codes they left: upscale dining, house cleaners, landscaped lawns and executive-style homes. In addition to rising homelessness, disappearing affordability and over-burdened public services, this has created a nearly insatiable need for the workers who provide those services, build those homes, and do the other jobs that the U.S. economy so often outsources to non-citizens. This has made Bozeman an endpoint on a now-common journey for many undocumented people, one that begins with the violence and economic misery of countries like Honduras, crosses the increasingly militarized U.S. border and concludes in cities throughout the Rockies, like Denver and Salt Lake City. But while recreation and amenity-dependent towns in Colorado have long drawn recently arrived immigrants seeking work, Bozeman’s appeal has sprouted seemingly overnight. 

It’s nearly impossible to accurately measure the growth of Bozeman’s Spanish-speaking population, since nearly all the new arrivals are undocumented. In Gallatin County, the Latino portion of the population jumped from 2.8% to 5% between 2010 and 2020, according to U.S. census data — a nearly 140% increase. Experts say the estimate is conservative and doesn’t include the years since 2021, the period of Bozeman’s most explosive housing-market growth.

An RV encampment near new housing in Bozeman.
An RV encampment near new housing in Bozeman. Credit: Will Warasila/High Country News

Evidence of this change is everywhere: in the Mexican grocery that opened in 2018, the succession of taco trucks along 7th Street, the youth soccer club that, in partnership with Bienvenidos, waived registration fees for immigrant kids. The public school system, meanwhile, is scrambling to support the influx of multilingual children. The number of students who need additional English language instruction in Bozeman’s public schools has doubled in just a few years to around 350, with at least as many recently arrived Latino students who are not enrolled in those programs. These immigration trends have been good for Bozeman: A study by the South NorthNexus, a nonprofit that offers immigration legal aid in Montana, estimated that Hispanic immigrants contributed more than $300 million in economic benefits to the Bozeman-area economy in 2022.

The newly arrived immigrants come from countries like Guatemala, Peru and Venezuela, as well as Honduras. Some crossed the border without documentation and try to remain undetected. Immigrants seeking asylum — including many Hondurans — declare themselves at the border and submit a petition, arguing their case. But they cannot apply for a work permit until their asylum petition has gone unresolved for 150 days. By September 2024, there will be a record 8 million pending cases in U.S. immigration courts, and, according to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, work-permit applications by asylum seekers are taking a year to process, on top of the mandatory 150-day waiting period.

These people came to the U.S. to work, yet the law bars them from doing so. Asylum seekers who recently came to Bozeman can expect to wait well over a year before they’re legally authorized to work. It’s not surprising, then, that many immigrants have sidestepped the system, taking jobs that pay cash and living in fear of encounters with law enforcement. This is the other side of one of the nation’s most explosive— and expensive — housing markets.  

A resident sitting outside of their camper in Bozeman.
A resident sitting outside of their camper in Bozeman. Credit: Will Warasila/High Country News

According to Buzz Tarlow, this is an old story in Montana, where prosperous industries have long drawn immigrants who have helped shape the character of the state. Tarlow spent decades as a construction lawyer in Bozeman and Big Sky, and he knows the industry intimately. “Montana is historically a state with immigrants from all over the world,” he said. Butte, a city 85 miles west of Bozeman, was one of the West’s largest copper boomtowns at the turn of the 20th century. Anaconda Copper was one of the biggest mining companies in the world, and its mines attracted immigrants from Ireland, Germany, Eastern Europe and China. They, in turn, helped create Montana’s first industrial hub — and inspired a wave of labor organizing that transformed the state’s politics. Tarlow sees this pattern playing out in Bozeman, along with many of the same tensions and contradictions.

“What we’re experiencing with a construction boom in southwestern Montana is no different than the Butte mines,” he said. “Hopefully, the working conditions are a little better, but it’s hard. The weather’s nasty. And there’s a language barrier.” 

For Spanish-speaking immigrants, these daily difficulties, whether at work or in the form of a menacing legal system, are ever-present. At one point, Luis was pulled over after he made a right turn at a green light while driving the speed limit. A Bozeman immigration advocate who helped him in court said that the citation did not list a justification for stopping him. She suspected racial profiling. Luis agreed. “In court, they told me it was because of the license, but the question is: Why did she stop me?” he said. 

Luis received a relatively light fine — $300 for driving without a license — but now he travels to and from work worried about another police encounter. 

“I’m afraid to drive now, because they could detain me,” he said.

THE NEED FOR WORKERS in construction and service jobs is evident all over Bozeman — from the skeletons of half-built houses to the signs outside of a Wendy’s advertising starting rates of $22/hour. But the robust housing market that draws these immigrants to Bozeman cannot provide them with reliable shelter, especially if they lack government-issued IDs, a credit history or a Social Security number. In any case, it is an extremely tight rental market. 

Bozeman’s rental vacancy rate hovered around 2% for years, before rising slightly in 2023. Immigrants are forced to accept run-down, overcrowded housing: trailer parks, highway motels, rentals owned by their bosses. Either that, or they join the thousands of people who already sleep on the streets every night. Montana had the nation’s largest increase in individuals experiencing chronic homelessness in 2023, and urban camping is omnipresent.During a cold snap in early 2024, Bozeman’s sole year-round emergency warming center was at 98% capacity, according to Brian Guyer, housing director of the nonprofit Human Resource Development Council, or HRDC, which operates the shelter. Since 2020, the HRDC has seen a 223% increase in the number of Hispanic individuals its programs serve, from 5% to 16%. Use of the emergency warming shelter by Latino people “has gone up significantly since the pandemic,” Guyer noted, though it remains “a small percentage of the overall guests.” 

$2.3 million condos under construction in Bozeman.
$2.3 million condos under construction in Bozeman. Credit: Will Warasila/High Country News

Marco and Carmen have been luckier than many others; the couple and their children already had family in Montana, who helped them stay off the streets. Ever since they left La Ceiba, a Honduran port city on the Caribbean coast, to come to the U.S. in 2019, the family has moved repeatedly, each new rental acquired under the name of a relative who married an American. Last May, the couple sat on a park bench outside a church, cottonwood fluff making drifts at their feet. A few trailer parks in Bozeman, and some others in outlying towns like Belgrade, are known to look the other way when renters lack documents, a situation that often leads to overcrowding. Some immigrants find rentals through brokers who overlook the lack of identification in return for extortionary fees. (Luis paid an extra $2,000 to secure his family’s current rental.)

Despite the instability, Marco described his family’s home life as a respite — albeit an isolated one. Marco is a friendly, middle-aged man, with a sun-creased face and the thick hands and forearms of a laborer. In America, making friends is more difficult than back home, he said. He joked that he knows his neighbor’s dog better than he knows the neighbors themselves. 

Interior of vehicle being lived in by a Bozeman resident, with new housing development in background.
Interior of vehicle being lived in by a Bozeman resident, with new housing development in background. Credit: Will Warasila/High Country News

“I play chess with my son, sometimes we go to the movies,” he said. “Sometimes the whole family goes out to eat. We have little time to hang out because of work.”

After arriving in Montana, Marco spent about nine months framing houses, then worked a similar amount of time as a stonemason. Much of the work was in Big Sky, the nearby ski town. The latter gig ended, he said, after immigration authorities told his bosses to get rid of their undocumented employees. These days, he works in a restaurant kitchen, while his wife works at a fast-food joint. Both had to buy fake Social Security numbers on the black market at about $150 apiece. “You know how it is,” Marco said. “Everything is an application — they ask for ID, they ask for Social Security, all those things.” 

Immigrants like Marco who work illegally have little recourse when they’re mistreated at their jobs. Wage theft is common, according to multiple interviews with undocumented workers in Bozeman. Ana, for example, got a job almost immediately with a house-cleaning company. But after just a few weeks, she said, her boss abruptly left town without paying her or the other cleaners. Eventually, she found her current job, framing houses in Big Sky. Luis told me that many of his employers owe him money; one boss alone owes him $20,000 in unpaid work hours. But since he is working illegally, he has little recourse. “There has been a lot of this,” he said with a shrug. 

The Bozeman construction sector is organized around a few large Montana companies, supported by layers of contractors and subcontractors who employ the undocumented workers directly. Most pay in cash, and, in some cases, provide housing. Subcontractors are exempt from some legal labor standards, a situation that encourages substandard safety measures on the jobsite, while giving the larger firms deniability for employing noncitizens. Construction is dangerous work, one of the deadliest jobs in the U.S., according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. 

“Everything is an application — they ask for ID, they ask for Social Security, all those things.”

Soon after he came to Bozeman, a Honduran construction worker named Manuel was on a ladder on the second story of an unfinished house. He took a bad step, and, a moment later, hit the concrete floor with both feet. Nothing was fractured, but his thigh ballooned; recalling the injury, he held his hand a few inches away from his thigh to show the size of the swelling. Doctors told him that the impact had compressed the nerves in his leg. “It was almost like that leg was pushed further in,” he said. 

Later, Manuel learned that someone else paid his hospital bill, a kindness that not all laborers can count on. During his stint as a stonemason, Marco developed a hernia from lifting the heavy materials. But the cost — and the fear of being exposed for working illegally — kept him from seeking medical treatment. This is a common story: In a study of Bozeman’s Hispanic community, Montana State University’s nursing department found that 81% of respondents lacked a reliable source of medical care.

Last November, after months of effort, Marco and his family found a new place to rent with a large yard on the outskirts of Bozeman, near the airport. In a coffee shop in town, Marco sat, wearing a denim jacket and camouflage ball cap. He seemed tired but relieved at this housing breakthrough. His heart condition was getting worse, however, and he blamed much of it on the family’s housing troubles. “My stress has grown,” he told me. Sometimes he had palpitations. At others, he felt compression on his heart. “I didn’t have any (heart problems) before coming here,” he said.

Marco’s situation reveals the paradox that afflicts many of Bozeman’s Latino immigrants. His heart condition is exacerbated because he lacks legal status. But without legal status, he cannot address his heart condition. At one point, Marco bought discounted heart medication from a local clinic. But eventually the clinic told him that he would have to pay full price. Without insurance, the cost was too high. Marco said that he does not seek medical care because of the expense. He needs the money to help his son, his son’s girlfriend and their new baby — whom Marco has never met — make the trip to Montana. His wife, Carmen, was receiving medication from the same clinic. “But now she can’t pay,” he said. 

Marco told me that he and Carmen come from a culture that trusts in God, and they believe that God will take care of their health. But, he said, “If there were a way we could get or find what we need, medicines and everything — if there were a way to do it without so much difficulty — we would do it.” 

A situation this stressful is bound to cause widespread depression and substance abuse. This increasingly worries Susie Rodriguez, who runs an immigrant aid nonprofit called the Montana Immigrant Justice Alliance, or MIJA, which means daughter in Spanish. Rodriguez runs MIJA in what little free time she has. She has seven kids, and, in addition to her job at the hospital, she is taking classes to get her nursing certificate. In her day job at a local emergency room, Rodriguez said that she has seen a noticeable spike in fentanyl overdoses. Montana’s attorney general recently announced a 20,000% increase in seizures of the drug since 2019. Rodriguez fears what fentanyl’s availability means, given the anxiety and isolation that afflict so many new immigrants. She worries particularly about young, unattached men, who have no families and a hemmed-in social life. 

“That’s their life,” she went on. “You work every day, every day of the week. Sometimes they’re working Saturdays. So you only have that one day, Sunday, to do your laundry, to catch up and drink, back to bed, and wake up early again.” 

BOZEMAN-AREA immigration advocates have built a robust network of local aid groups. Every month, Bienvenidos holds a coordination meeting over Zoom, attended by representatives from the local food bank, emergency housing groups and, at times, city officials. 

These meetings reflect the rapid growth of Bozeman’s immigrant population, but they also show that the city is getting scant help from the state. Montana’s political makeup has changed dramatically in recent years. Sen. Jon Tester, who faces an election this year, is the last remaining Democrat holding statewide office, and Republicans now have supermajorities in the Statehouse and Senate. Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte signed a bill banning immigrant sanctuary cities, while other statewide politicians, like Sen. Steve Daines and Rep. Ryan Zinke, frequently demonize immigrants. 

In the last legislative session, immigration advocates were optimistic about a bill that would allow immigrants to obtain driving privilege cards. (In Montana, you can’t get a license without proof of legal residence.) Currently, 19 states allow immigrants to obtain non-citizen driver’s licenses, a concession that eases day-to-day difficulties, enabling people to drive to work legally. Other states, including Colorado and California, are making it easier for non-citizens to receive medical care or apply for business permits. The Montana bill, however, did not make it out of committee. 

“You work every day, every day of the week. Sometimes they’re working Saturdays. So you only have that one day, Sunday, to do your laundry, to catch up and drink, back to bed, and wake up early again.”

Bienvenidos and other groups have tried to convince construction firms to publicly support this legislation. “They’re the ones that benefit from the workers,” Ita Killeen, the director of Bienvenidos’ mentorship team, said. “They’ve been generous in donations, but none of them have been willing to come and testify for the driving privilege card.”

Bozeman advocates have also circulated a pro-immigration statement. The Big Sky Chamber of Commerce signed it; the Bozeman chamber has not, however. Some of this reluctance surely stems from the state’s political atmosphere. One Bozeman immigration advocate asked not to be quoted by name because she has received threats in the past for her work.

Some of these threats have come from Take Back Bozeman, a conservative Facebook group. The group regularly posts comments about Bienvenidos, including the names and faces of people who work with the immigrant community, as well as news stories involving crimes committed by immigrants. One post from last November included a series of screenshots of Facebook comments from people with Latino names seeking housing or offering work in the area. A separate post included a meme of President Joe Biden asking: “If you don’t support (a proposed city housing plan), where else is Bienvenidos going to put all those illegal aliens that are coming to Bozeman?”

Old and new housing near downtown Bozeman, Montana.
Old and new housing near downtown Bozeman, Montana. Credit: Will Warasila/High Country News

SOME IMMIGRANT parents worry about what this new, strange place is doing to their children. Many of the newly arrived kids find Bozeman public schools alienating and hostile. A Bienvenidos volunteer recounted an incident at a middle school, where she was walking with a female student, a recent immigrant. Ahead of them was a group of white girls. One, noticing the Latina student, tipped over a nearby garbage can and told her to pick it up. “Mexican trash,” the girl said, according to the volunteer. 

These incidents compound an already difficult transition for immigrant children, many of whom arrive in Montana traumatized by the journey from their home countries. Rosa worries about her daughter, now 12, who traveled with her and endured two kidnappings and months of confinement at the border. Her daughter is quiet these days, and she doesn’t like school. “The bus brings her home and then she locks herself in her room,” Rosa said. 

Casey Bertram, superintendent of Bozeman Public Schools, told me that the school system is working hard to figure out the best way to help students like Rosa’s daughter. He said that the school system endured a $4.1 million budget cut last year, but still found the funding to increase the support staff for its hundreds of immigrant students. He described an array of challenges, including months of lost schooling during the children’s journeys to Bozeman, as well as widespread and lasting trauma. Manuel, the construction worker who fell from the ladder, is taking his daughter to therapy. To get to the U.S., he paid a coyote to secure spots in a shipping container for the two of them. The immigrants would scream and punch the container walls, desperate for air, and some nearly suffocated. “There was a moment,” Manuel said, “when I got on my knees and asked God if I could die” instead of his daughter.

Many Latino students also work long hours to support their families. The school district, Bertram said, wants to work with these families and build schedules that accommodate their kids. But that, in turn, requires staff who speak Spanish and can build trust with immigrant parents. 

“There are so many areas where these families and students are struggling, need support, need resources.”

“The more staff we’ve been able to provide means deeper connections we’re building with students and families,” Bertram said. “There are so many areas where these families and students are struggling, need support, need resources. And we feel strapped to be able to provide everything that they need to be successful.”

Success for Bozeman’s recently arrived immigrants will require many things — support for their kids, reliable housing and accessible health care, among others. City and state institutions are meeting these needs erratically at best. Bozeman’s economic success rests on a contradiction: It attracts high-earning transplants to fuel it, while it forces the immigrant laborers who make the city’s growth possible into a precarious existence. 

New housing development next to farmland in Bozeman’s Valley West.
New housing development next to farmland in Bozeman’s Valley West. Credit: Will Warasila/High Country News

The contradictions are especially vivid in the construction industry, where the demand for luxury-home construction brings immigrant workers to Bozeman and simultaneously prevents those workers from finding cheap housing for themselves. Tarlow, the retired construction lawyer, noted that the Bozeman-area construction sector skewed conservative even as it remained reliant on the labor of undocumented immigrants. 

“Among the bigger companies,” he said, “they would say things to me like, ‘Buzz, you know I want the biggest wall between us and Mexico, because I love Donald Trump. But, by the way, could you get me some guys?’” 

Even so, Manuel believes that Montana has been good for him and his kids. He misses his family, especially his ailing mother, and driving without a license makes him nervous. But his job pays well, his daughter wants to attend college, and many people are kind, he said. He’s made friends beyond the local immigrant population, including one man he affectionately called his “American friend,” who brought medicine to his house when his son was sick. “He’s a very good friend,” Manuel said. 

We were still talking when the restaurant we were in started to close. Employees began putting chairs on tables and sweeping the floor. Manuel stood up and said that he couldn’t have stayed much longer anyway. “Tomorrow, I have to work.”   

This article was produced in partnership with The Nation

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This article appeared in the May 2024 print edition of the magazine with the headline “Behind Bozeman’s Boom.”

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Nick Bowlin is a contributing editor for High Country News. Email him at nickbowlin@hcn.org or submit a letter to the editor.