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  1. #1
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Growing Hispanic population part of Idaho's history

    Growing Hispanic population part of Idaho's history






    • Courtesy photo

    A worker picks crops at Robinson Orchards in Sunnyslope, Idaho.


    Hispanics have been woven into the fabric of Idaho ever since it was granted statehood in 1890.

    They came as trappers and traders then, and as the state’s agricultural industries grew, they worked in fields and on railroads. The labor they provided helped build the Gem State into what it is today.

    Today Latinos have the fastest rate of growth of any racial group statewide — more than double the growth percentage of the white population.

    However, Latinos are mostly still working the same types of jobs they did in the state’s early decades, and low wages, health problems and a lack of education are still issues for the Latino community across Idaho.

    Contrary to stereotypes, Idaho’s Hispanic population is predominantly born in the United States. It’s also a young population — most Gem State Latinos are under the age of 30.

    Between mid-2013 and mid-2014, the Hispanic population of the state increased by 2.9 percent, the fastest rate of growth for this demographic since 2011, according to the Idaho Department of Labor.

    From 2013 to 2014, Idaho’s Hispanic population grew to 196,502 — a 5,518 increase that pushed Idaho’s Latino population to 12 percent of

    the state’s total. This number is a best estimate based on a variety of statistics and accounts for both undocumented and naturalized Latinos in the Gem State, the Department of Labor said.

    By comparison, the state’s white population in 2014 experienced the largest growth of any race in sheer numbers — 17,817 — but only grew by 1.2 percent, the lowest growth rate of any race in the state.

    In the eight counties that make up Southeast Idaho — Bannock, Bingham, Bear Lake, Bonneville, Caribou, Franklin, Oneida and Power counties — the Hispanic or Latino population accounts for about 9 percent of the total, slightly below that state average.

    According to the most recent Pew Research poll, 85 percent of Idaho’s Hispanics are Mexican or of Mexican descent, which prompted the opening of a Mexican Consulate in Boise in 2008.

    Mexican-Americans and Mexican immigrants have lived and worked in Idaho since the late 1800s, according to “Voces Hispanas,” a book by University of Washington professor Erasmo Gamboa, which includes excerpts from the Idaho Hispanic Oral History Project.

    Idaho’s initial Latino population was mostly men, coming to the untouched western states to trap and trade. While many Hispanics worked in Idaho during the late 1800s, very few settled here.

    Idaho’s Latino population didn’t experience any significant growth until the 1900s when a combination of political strife in Mexico and a booming American economy kickstarted immigration across the southern border, according to Gamboa.

    In the 1920s, Congress restricted immigration from Asia and Europe causing U.S. businesses to turn to Mexican immigrants as a cheap labor source to work on railroads and in fields, according to the Idaho Human Rights Education Center.

    During World War II, the Bracero program brought Mexican citizens into the U.S. to fill a need for labor, especially on farms in the western states. In 1948 the program was shut down in Idaho because of discrimination, poor housing and harsh work environments. However, as was the case in all the states where Braceros were employed, the Mexican laborers stayed in Idaho and continued to work.

    Immigration to the U.S. from Mexico continued to grow in the 1980s through the first decade of the 2000s thanks to a strong U.S. economy and a demand for cheap labor in industries like construction and agriculture.

    In recent years the net immigration between the U.S. and Mexico has dropped to zero, according to the Pew Research Center, because of a poor U.S. job market caused by the recession and a growing Mexican economy. Now the majority of our country’s Hispanic population is made up of U.S. citizens, either through naturalization or birthright citizenship.

    In Idaho only 31 percent of Latinos were born outside of the United States, and almost 70 percent of the state’s Latinos are U.S. citizens by birth. Those who were born outside of the U.S. tend to be older, around age 37, while the median age of Latinos born in Idaho is only 16.

    However, between 2009 and 2012 Idaho was one of only seven states that saw a notable increase in its unauthorized immigrant population, an increase of about 10,000 undocumented immigrants.

    “We see a lot of people from southern states like Arizona coming up here during harvest season to work,” said Adriana Flores, a nurse at the Aberdeen Health West Clinic. “We do have issues with people being uninsured because they are undocumented or they don’t qualify.”

    Even so, Idaho doesn’t have a significant population of unauthorized immigrants when compared to other states. Nevada has an estimated 190,000 undocumented immigrants and Washington state has roughly 230,000. There are only about 50,000 undocumented immigrants in Idaho, according to the Pew Hispanic Center.

    According to Pew, 83 percent of the unauthorized immigrants in Idaho are Mexican, even though most of the immigrants who have crossed the U.S./Mexico border in recent years are from Central American countries like Honduras and El Salvador. Undocumented immigrants account for only 3 percent of Idaho’s total population and less than 5 percent of the state’s workforce, according to Pew.

    In the U.S., Latinos are the fastest growing minority group and tend to grow at a much faster rate than the population as a whole.

    From 2004 to 2014, in the eight counties that make up Southeast Idaho, the total population increased by about 8 percent. During the same span the Hispanic population in those counties — Bannock, Bingham, Bear Lake, Bonneville, Caribou, Franklin, Oneida and Power — increased by 25 percent, about three times the rate of the total population.

    “This Hispanic population is growing at a much faster clip than the population as a whole. In towns like Aberdeen you have about a 50/50 split of white and Hispanic births,” said Dan Cravens, a regional economist at the Idaho Department of Labor. “In Bingham County, 1 in 5 residents are Hispanic and that’s a major change.”


    According to Idaho Department of Labor statistics released last month, Canyon County near Boise has the largest total Hispanic population in the state, with over 50,000 Hispanics, about 24 percent of the county’s total population. In eastern Idaho’s rural Clark County, a state-high 42 percent of the population is Hispanic, but Clark County only has 867 residents, 362 of which are Hispanic.

    In Southeast Idaho, Bonneville County has the largest Hispanic population (13,629) followed by Bingham (8,060). Power County has the largest percentage of Hispanics in its population (31.1 percent) in Southeast Idaho followed by Bingham (nearly 18 percent).

    Last year, only eight of Idaho’s 44 counties saw any decrease in their Hispanic populations and four of those saw losses of less than 1 percent. Southeast Idaho’s Caribou County saw the largest percentage decrease statewide in its Hispanic population, but the 7.4 percent drop only amounted to an overall decrease of 29 Latinos in Caribou’s census.

    If current trends continue, in 20 years Idaho’s Hispanic population will increase by 50 percent while the state’s total population will only grow by 16 percent.

    “But I wouldn’t bet on it,” said Cravens, “There are a lot of things that can change that.”

    Recent growth in the Hispanic population in Idaho has made Hispanics the largest minority group in the state by far. Currently, the Latino population in Idaho is larger than the populations of all other minorities combined.

    However, there are still some major inequities between the growing Hispanic population and the white population, which still accounts for over 90 percent of the state’s total population.

    In Idaho schools, Latino children trail behind their white counterparts on both math and reading tests, have higher high school dropout rates and achieve lower college graduation rates. In 2012 over 23 percent of Idaho’s K-12 students were Hispanic but Hispanics made up less than 7 percent of the state’s college students, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

    “There is a tradition of low-wage field jobs in these communities,” said Rudy Peńa, a former educator and counselor who was born, raised and still lives in Aberdeen. “The way to survive is to have everybody work, so kids would miss school to go to work. If (Hispanic) students didn’t feel comfortable in school they didn’t go. They know they can always work.”

    The Center for Community and Justice in Boise recently filed a civil rights complaint against the Idaho State Department of Education, the Idaho Charter School Commission and Idaho’s 48 charter schools after statistics showed inequities in the opportunities and representation of Latino students, students with limited English, students from low-income families and students with disabilities in the state’s charter schools.

    This gap in educational achievement helps perpetuate the earnings gap between Hispanics and the rest of the population. According to the Pew Research Center, in 2011 the median personal income of Hispanics in Idaho was $17,000 per year, $8,000 less than the median income of the white population, and the percentage of Hispanics living below the poverty line in Idaho was more than double the percentage of whites.

    With higher rates of poverty come higher rates of obesity, diabetes, teen pregnancy and heart disease. According to the Centers for Disease Control, cancer, heart disease, accidental injuries, stroke and diabetes were the top causes of death for Idaho Latinos in 2010, and according to a 2012 study done by the University of Idaho 50 percent of Idaho’s Hispanic population lacked health insurance.

    “In these communities they’re dealing with their immediate needs, making it hard to plan for the future,” said Peńa. “It’s the ‘now’ things they have to take care of. But we have to get out of the mindset that any job will do.”

    http://www.idahostatejournal.com/mem...1d99a9f78.html
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  2. #2
    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    The above article sounds like a justification for illegals in Idaho.

    Mexicans were not indigenous to Idaho and until 1997, under Clinton when the term "Hispanic" was considered a separate ethnicity for political;l reasons until then Hispanic has been considered white in 1997 the OMB recognizes Hispanic as a cultural, not racial designation JMO

    From the OMB

    Multiple Responses to the Hispanic Origin Question.--The Interagency Committee recommended that respondents to Federal data collections should be permitted to report more than one race. During the most recent public comment process, a few comments suggested that the concept of "marking more than one box" should be extended to the Hispanic origin question. Respondents are now asked to indicate if they are "of Hispanic origin" or "not of Hispanic origin." Allowing individuals to select more than one response to the ethnicity question would provide the opportunity to indicate ethnic heritage that is both Hispanic and non-Hispanic.

    The term "Hispanic" refers to persons who trace their origin or descent to Mexico, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Central and South America, and other Spanish cultures. While there has been considerable public concern about the need to review Directive No. 15 with respect to classifying individuals of mixed racial heritage, there has been little comment on reporting both an Hispanic and a non-Hispanic origin. On many Federal forms, Hispanics can also express a racial identity on a separate race question. In the decennial census, individuals who consider themselves part Hispanic can also indicate additional heritages in the ancestry question.

    On one hand, it can be argued that allowing individuals to mark both categories in the Hispanic origin question would parallel the instruction "to mark (or select) one or more" racial categories. Individuals would not have to choose between their parents' ethnic heritages, and movement toward an increasingly diverse society would be recognized.

    On the other hand, because the matter of multiple responses to the Hispanic ethnicity question was not raised in the early phases of the public comment process, no explicit provisions were made for testing this approach in the research conducted to inform the review of Directive No. 15. While a considerable amount of research was focused on how to improve the response rate to the Hispanic origin question, it is unclear whether and to what extent explicitly permitting multiple responses to the Hispanic origin question would affect nonresponse to the race question or hamper obtaining more detailed data on Hispanic population groups.

    Information on the possible impact of any changes on the quality of the data has been an essential element of the review. While the effects of changes in the Hispanic origin question are unknown, they could conceivably be substantial. Thus, OMB has decided not to include a provision in the standards that would explicitly permit respondents to select both "Hispanic origin" and "Not of Hispanic Origin" options. OMB believes that this is an item for future research. In the meantime, the ancestry question on the decennial census long form does provide respondents who consider themselves part Hispanic to write in additional heritages.
    https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/fedreg_1997standards
    1890

    Idaho becomes 43rd state


    Idaho, the last of the 50 states to be explored by whites, is admitted to the union.

    Exploration of the North American continent mostly proceeded inward from the Atlantic and Pacific coasts and northward from Spanish Mexico. Therefore, the rugged territory that would become Idaho long remained untouched by Spanish, French, British, and American trappers and explorers. Even as late as 1805, Idaho Indians like the Shoshone had never encountered a white man.

    That changed with the arrival of the American explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark in the summer of 1805. Searching for a route over the Rocky Mountains to the Columbia River, Lewis and Clark traveled through Idaho with the aid of the Shoshone Indians and their horses. British fur traders and trappers followed a few years later, as did missionaries and a few hardy settlers. As with many remote western states, large-scale settlement began only after gold was discovered. Thousands of miners rushed into Idaho when word of a major gold strike came in September 1860. Merchants and farmers followed, eager to make their fortunes “mining the miners.”

    By 1880, Idaho boasted a population of 32,610. In the southern section of the territory, many settlers were Mormons who had been dispatched from Salt Lake City to found new colonies. Increasingly, Idaho territory became divided between a Mormon-dominated south and an anti-Mormon north. In the mid-1880s, anti-Mormon Republicans used widespread public antipathy toward the Mormon practice of polygamy to pass legislation denying the predominantly Democratic Mormons the vote.

    With the Democratic Mormon vote disarmed, Idaho became a Republican-dominated territory. National Republicans eager to increase their influence in the U.S. Congress began to push for Idaho statehood in 1888. The following year, the Idaho territorial legislature approved a strongly anti-Mormon constitution. The U.S. Congress approved the document on this day in 1890, and Idaho became the 43rd state in the Union.

    http://www.history.com/this-day-in-h...mes-43rd-state

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