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'Mess' lingers for Latino aid center
By CYNTHIA REYNAUD • creynaud@dmreg.com • May 26, 2008

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Waterloo, Ia. - Some things seem to be returning to normal following the raid of a northeast Iowa meat-processing plant two weeks ago.

At the Cattle Congress in Waterloo, makeshift courtrooms have returned to empty gathering rooms. Entrances are now vacant of metal detectors, police officers and security guards. Even hotels and restaurants are seeing fewer government officials coming through their doors.

Other things, though, are still in disarray.


"The government can set a deadline of when they can leave, and they leave us the mess," said Mario Basurto, program coordinator at El Centro Latinoamericano.

For the nonprofit Latino resource center, this means piles of bills its staff members have yet to total but expect will put a large dent in the operating budget. "As of now, we still don't know how we're going to bounce back financially," Basurto said.

El Centro's $135,000 2007-08 budget wasn't intended to support hundreds of Latinos whose lives fell apart after the May 12 raid in Postville, he said.

The money was supposed to pay the salaries of two full-time employees and one part-time worker. It was supposed to support English-language and computer classes and case work services for Waterloo's Latino community.

Never did they think they would be using it to pay for daily trips to Postville, employee overtime, food, phone cards and clothing.

"We just never anticipated or budgeted money to take care of this kind of tragedy," said Carole Gustafson, El Centro's board president.

Nonetheless, when the need arose, Gustafson said, she didn't think twice about the financial consequences. "If El Centro hadn't stepped in, I don't know what would have happened," she said.

The week after the raid, El Centro employees worked 120 hours each, she said. They took food, water and clothing to families too scared to leave their houses and for those who no longer could afford to go to the store.

"They helped me find people, track people down and gave me information about lawyers," said Paul Rael, the director of Hispanic ministries at St. Bridget's Catholic Church in Postville.

At first, the organization had help. More than 30 volunteers and 150 translators offered their services. Three shipments of groceries a day were sent to Postville, but still, El Centro's Waterloo office never ceased to be full. This went on for a little more than a week. On Wednesday, the last shipment went to Postville.

El Centro remains the go-between for detainees and their families. El Centro's focus now is to help those who remain in Postville get back on their feet. "I don't see it stopping for us anytime soon," Basurto said.






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