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  1. #1
    Senior Member WhatMattersMost's Avatar
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    ILLEGALS need more bridges to success

    GSU panelists say there is a lack of support systems in South Suburbs

    November 4, 2007
    By David Schwab, The Star

    The state of affairs for Latinos in the South Suburbs "is very desperate" and is at a critical crossroads in terms of education, health care and employment, experts speaking Thursday at a Governors State University forum said.

    "Latinos are coming to (the South Suburbs) fast, but they have little or no support systems," said Catalina Ramos-Hernandez, director of the GSU Latino Center for Excellence.

    She was the moderator of an event called "The Impact of Education on Health and the Workforce in the Latino Community," part of a slew of educational and informational events building up to Saturday's inauguration ceremonies of GSU President Elaine Maimon.

    The panelists ranged from health care researchers, to policy experts, to lawyers to community activists.

    The two-hour event was mostly a general discussion of issues Latinos face in the United States. But in interviews afterwards, panelists were able to boil down some of these issues to how they were playing out in the South Suburbs.

    Each said the rapid migration of Latinos to the South Suburbs, both from Chicago and directly from abroad, presented Latinos simultaneously with an enormous challenge and tremendous potential for success.

    Adriela Fernandez, associate dean for academic programs at Purdue University and former doctoral student at GSU, said that at the crux of the issue was the population explosion of Latinos in the elementary through high school system. This population, she said, needs to find ways to fill the ranks of professional, managerial, and academic jobs in order to move the Latino community, and the economy in general, forward.

    Jose Arrom, a health researcher at the University of Illinois at Chicago, said "parts of the South Suburbs are very segregated," and that fact, coupled with the idea that many Latinos are new to the area, has caused a fragmentation of social programs and networks for Latinos.

    Arrom was optimistic, though, that in time Latinos in the South Suburbs will adapt to the new area, and the area will adapt to them, opening up better access to education, jobs and health care.

    Jorge Mujica, a journalist, labor organizer and community activist, said there is a particular problem bothering Latinos in the suburbs of Chicago.

    That problem is the "no-match letter" issue, a mandate for employers that's been halted by the federal government.

    Even though employers shouldn't be firing employees they suspect don't have valid Social Security numbers, this is occurring in suburban areas, including the South Suburbs. He said that could be because suburban Latinos don't have the strength in numbers or the leverage of those in Chicago.

    "We are seeing the effects of all the anti-immigration policies," in the South Suburbs, Mujica said, echoing Arrom's notion that the Latino community in the South Suburbs is fragmented, leaving many workers at risk.


    Echoing Fernandez's sentiments, Mujica agreed that if they don't come into positions where they can do the hiring and firing, Latinos will remain under-informed, underpaid, and under-served in areas such as the South Suburbs, and they will continue to fall prey to backlash against immigration.

    Virginia Martinez, an attorney for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, wanted to know what could be done to help rectify some of the issues addressed by the panel.

    "What are the strategies (to address some of the major issues affecting the Latino community) that could work in the community?" she asked.

    From the panelists, there was a sense that rhetoric wasn't going to cut it, but also a sense that the day's discussion was at least a step forward that gathered some key voices together in the same room.

    "We need better bridges," Fernandez said, adding that, "Governors State has already taken the first step" in building connections between the community, grassroots organizations and academia as they concern the Latino population.

    David Schwab may be reached at dschwab@starnewspapers.comor at (70802-8832.
    http://www.southtownstar.com/neighborho ... os.article


    As usual its all about their Raza . . . funny how they keep "forgetting" to put the ILLEGAL in front of the word immigrants because we all know that legal immigrants don't have ANY of the problems mentioned in this farce of an article.

    IMMIGRANTS come in all races and ethnicities, if these racists were truly concerned about IMMIGRANTS this meeting would not have been limited to "Latinos".
    It's Time to Rescind the 14th Amendment

  2. #2
    wmb1957's Avatar
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    The state is so broke, most of us are wondering when Blago is going to declare himself King and start printing money. He governns by decree anyhow.

    He ripped out anything he didn't like in the budget the legislature passed, mostly for Representatives that criticized his politics, then put in extra stuff including more of his healthcare plan, which covers illegal aliens. The legislature did not override it because he made a deal with the Democrat Majority Leader to include raises for the legislature, as long as they would not let the vote to override come to the floor.

    Then a couple days ago, he add about enough more funding to cover an additional 150,000 on his healthcare, which now covers those making up to $81,000 per year.

    In state tuition is allowed for illegal immigration in Illinois, in spite of federal law.
    Illinois also passed a law making it illegal to use E-Verify, the law applies to employers that used it prior to the law, as well as employers that use it in other states but do business in Illinois.

    Illinois has no protections for the citizens of illinois as far as voting. Say you are a citizen is about it.

    Another one of his laws by decree was a state home mortage program for "undocumented workers". The Democrat controlled State Legislature protects the Democrat "king" of Illnois.

    Quite a few of the programs he cut include social services. Real nice guy.

  3. #3
    Senior Member MyAmerica's Avatar
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    "We need better bridges," Fernandez said, adding that, "Governors State has already taken the first step" in building connections between the community, grassroots organizations and academia as they concern the Latino population.
    "One of the hardest things in life to learn is which bridge to cross and which bridge to burn"--they need to cross the bridge heading back to Mexico.

    Fences make good neighbors.
    "Distrust and caution are the parents of security."
    Benjamin Franklin

    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  4. #4
    Senior Member IndianaJones's Avatar
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    Convince us ...WHY do we need to build better bridges for illegals when we want neither! The foot is in the door so how to get rid of the salesman...it's a quandry!
    We are NOT a nation of immigrants!

  5. #5
    Senior Member americangirl's Avatar
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    This sounds like..."We can't get rid of them, so we might as well try to make something out of them."

    Good luck trying. You can take the people out of their 3rd-world country, but you can't take the 3rd-world country out of the people. Just look at the LAUSD. This is the largest school district in the U.S., and it's likely that hundreds of thousands of students in that school district are here illegally from south of our border (or born of parents who are here illegally) and are getting a FREE education. And yet this is one of the worst school districts in the country (if not THE worst). The students are dropping out at an enormous rate, the test scores are some of the lowest in the nation, and the violence and crime in the schools is high.

    Shoot...you put silver spoons in their mouths, and they just spit them out! Why even bother?
    Calderon was absolutely right when he said...."Where there is a Mexican, there is Mexico".

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