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IMMIGRATION

The New Dream Isn’t American

Immigrants are deterred by the ailing economy and tougher border controls.

 

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Until recently, Salvador Luna, A 41-year-old toy vendor in Mexico City, had planned to join his two sisters in New York City, where they work illegally as maids. "But they're telling me about people getting rounded up and deported, and how life in general is getting harder there," he says. One of Luna's co-workers was just deported back to Mexico, shortly after handing $1,000 to a coyote to cross the border. And there are no guarantees Luna could earn significantly more than the $20 he makes daily in Mexico. "I want a better life for my family," says the father of two, "but I'm not sure I want to risk the trouble of getting to the United States just to get tossed back."

Every year, millions of people around the globe make the essentially economic choice of whether to come to the United States—legally or illegally. But in the past 18 months the calculus behind that decision has changed. Many immigrants are leaving the United States—willingly and unwillingly—and countless others are deciding not to come. The reasons: tougher enforcement and border control, a slowing U.S. economy and impressive growth in developing countries, where many immigrants hail from.

Like Luna, potential immigrants have been deterred by more stringent border controls. Nationwide, deportations of illegal immigrants rose from 178,657 in fiscal 2005 to 282,548 in fiscal 2007—up 58 percent. At the same time, apprehensions are down sharply along the 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border—in fiscal 2007, 859,000 illegal immigrants were stopped, compared with 1.07 million in 2006—an indication that fewer people are attempting to cross. Border Patrol spokesman Ramon Rivera chalks it up partly to an effort started in 2005 to prosecute immigrants for illegal entry—"word got around real quick"—and partly to Operation Jump Start, under which thousands of National Guard members were sent to the border region in support roles, freeing more of the expanded roster of 16,000 Border Patrol agents to get into the field.

The government has also been going after employers who hire undocumented workers. "We really wanted to target prosecutions of egregious employers as well as illegal aliens who are stealing the identities of Americans," says Julie Myers, assistant secretary for Immigration and Customs Enforcement at the Department of Homeland Security. The combined number of arrests of employers and illegal workers at work sites—like this month's high-profile raid on a kosher meat-processing plant in Iowa that netted 300 suspects—rose from 1,292 in 2005 to 4,940 in 2007.

The slowing economy means less work for immigrants, and for the people who make a living providing services to them. Julio Duarte, a Honduran who was among a group of 50 day laborers outside a Home Depot in Hempstead, N.Y., recently, has lived in America for three years, and he's found it tough going lately. "For four months I haven't been able to work. When you have no work, you have no anything," he says. In the Southwest, commercial districts of cities that were once thronged with construction workers now resemble ghost towns. Alma Espinoza, 53, who cuts hair at the El y Ella Salon in central Phoenix, has seen her daily business drop from $500 to $100 since last year. "If this goes on," Espinoza says, "the salon won't stay open."

Most immigrants seek work that enables them to support families back home. But in the first quarter of 2008, Mexico's central bank said remittances from the United States fell 2.9 percent. And a survey released by the Inter-American Development Bank in April found that 3 million fewer Latino immigrants are sending money home from the United States this year compared with two years ago. About one third of those surveyed—and 49 percent of those who have been in the United States fewer than five years—said they were thinking about going home.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: daddyo159 @ 05/30/2008 9:37:17 AM

    Q; WHATS DOES A BRICK AND A FATAMERICAN WOMAN HAVE IN COMMON ??? A; BOTH OF THEM GET LAYED BY MEXICANS LMFAO NO HUSSEIN VOTE FOR McCAIN !!!

  • Posted By: Jurr @ 05/29/2008 8:08:14 AM

    Not really. The first quarter it is estimated that $80 billion was earned by illegals & shipped home. No income taxes, SS, or medicare was paid on those earning. That is a huge problem. They don't pay into the system yet they want the rights & freedoms. That's BS. They are the only group that is protected while breaking federal laws. Look at that law in Farmers Branch Texas that said landlords could not rent to illegals. That law was ruled unconstitutional.

    Every time an illegal without a license or insurance causes a car wreck who do you think ends up paying for it? In Texas auto insurance rates are 35% percent higher due to all the illegals on our roads causing accidents. Hospitals have to treat illegals knowing that in most cases they will never see a dime, who ends up paying for that?

  • Posted By: Jurr @ 05/29/2008 7:56:08 AM

    Not me, maybe my ancestors 150 years ago but they came here legally. Bit of a difference don't ya think? The world has changed.

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