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08-26-2016, 02:57 PM #1
Mexican father walks his kids across the border to school every day
Oscar Margain and KENS , KHOU 9:08 AM. MDT August 26, 2016
A new school year can be a challenge for many parents, but imagine taking your kids out of the country just to get them the best education possible.
A Mexican father makes the cross over every day to do just that.
Just after 3:00 p.m. every day, in the South Texas heat, a swarm of kids are seen walking towards the Hidalgo International Bridge after a full day at school.
Both 7-year-old Luis and 8-year-old Kayla strap on their backpacks and get ready to walk a mile from their school to the other side of the border into Mexico.
Their father, Jose Luis Dominguez, knows it’s not easy, but knowing how important it is for his kids start school makes it necessary.
“I bring them to school every day. We cross the border so they can have a better education,” Dominguez said. “Because schooling is better here than in Mexico.”
Like Dominguez, there are many parents living in Mexico who’ve been able to enroll their kids in American schools, either through charter schools or tuition programs.
In most cases, all they have to do is provide a physical address in the U.S., whether they live there or not; anything to protect their children from danger.
“It’s ugly across the border,” Dominguez said. “Kids are being abducted. It’s better here [in the U.S.], safer, knowing that nothing will happen.”
The 32-year-old father has been walking his children to school for two years now. His job at the fast food restaurant across the street allows him to drop off his kids and pick them up. But his paycheck can’t buy him a permanent life on the U.S. side.
Nevertheless, Dominguez hopes his sacrifices will get his children walking on a better path.
For parents and students living in Mexico, a quality education away from the drug violence is reason enough to wake up every morning and do it all over again.
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08-26-2016, 03:15 PM #2
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Unreal - we really need to pay for mexican school childrens' education. The father is probably an illegal too as well as taking an American citizen's job. Does border patrol let them in & out every day for 2 yrs now? How many other mexican children are doing this? Have read that US welfare payments are in mexican addresses.
Our gov't is breaking all kind of laws in their quest for "surprise it is now the North American Union" and USA does not exist anymore as a sovereign nation.
With all the bravado of mexican politicians @ how great their country is, why don't they start fixing their problems and stop the stealing from American taxpayers. Better yet, let our gov't stop being co-conspirators.Last edited by artist; 08-26-2016 at 03:17 PM.
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08-26-2016, 04:00 PM #3
1/30/15
Mexican children cross Texas border to attend school
Click to read.NO AMNESTY
Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.
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08-26-2016, 04:02 PM #4NO AMNESTY
Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.
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08-26-2016, 04:10 PM #5
April 29, 2007
Sarah Viren
Mexican Children Cross Border to Go to School
For the past two years,Rachel Ortiz's commute to her El Paso school has begun each morning in Mexico.
As the sun rises over that side of the Rio Grande, the first-grader follows her father from their cinder-block home through the streets of Ciudad Juarez.
Aaron Ortiz holds his 6-year-old's pink backpack and later her hand. At the border they funnel onto the pedestrian bridge alongside dozens of other children with backpacks holding parents' hands. Then they are on the other side, saying goodbye at the gates of Vilas Elementary, where breakfast is served free and special classes are offered for English-language learners.
At that school, Rachel has made friends with American students. She writes reports on butterflies and decides she wants to be a doctor — for dogs — when she grows up. And when the school bell rings at the end of the day, her father is waiting outside, ready to walk her back home to Mexico.
This daily cycle is repeated up and down the borderland, where a history of cross-border friendships, families and marriages has eroded the lines between what is Mexican and what is American. In El Paso, the Mexico-to-United-States trek to school is so commonplace that border officials opened a special lane just for students at one of the crossings this month. More than 1,200 passed through that lane from Mexico on a recent morning. Some are college or private school students, but many, including Rachel, attend public schools.
In El Paso, most folks see this as part of the flux inherent to border life. But there has been some grumbling about spending U.S. tax dollars to educate students living in Mexico, especially this spring as the city's biggest school district prepares for a bond election. The El Paso Independent School District, which expects to take in 10,000 new students in the next five to eight years, will ask voters next month for permission to borrow $230 million for new schools.
"With this always comes the argument, 'Stop educating illegal aliens,' " said El Paso ISD spokesman Luis Villalobos, who blames the growth on families moving to the area for the planned Fort Bliss expansion.
U.S. ruling
School districts from other border towns say they face similar complaints. But each contends that they have few ways to count or control the number of Mexican residents attending their schools. The Supreme Court ruled in 1982 that schools cannot deny an education to students living illegally in the United States. As long as a parent or guardian has proof of residency in that school district — a water bill or lease typically will suffice — their child can attend. And often in places such as El Paso — where hospitals are just a quick trip across the border — students were born in the United States and are legal citizens, even if their parents aren't."It's hard to split that; it's not a splitable thing," said Elaine Hampton, who studies education along the border. "Maybe they are living with their aunt in Juarez and grandmother is over here or their grandmother is in Juarez and aunt is over here. It's just a family living in two places sometimes at the same time."
Hampton, a U.S.-born professor at the University of Texas at El Paso, grew up on the border and taught sixth-grade science there. The strained state of public education in Mexico is what pushes many students across the Rio Grande, she said. Just as the hope of better jobs entices their parents.
This is most true in a place such as Ciudad Juarez. Known alternately as a city of hope, because of its proximity to the U.S, and as a city of death, because of its history of violence, the border town is being flooded with newcomers. Droves of inland Mexicans rush there each month seeking work in the maquiladoras, or manufacturing plants, that line the city's edge.
The growth far outpaces the government's ability to build schools, forcing many to turn away students, Hampton said. Additionally, Mexican schools can be cost-prohibitive to some parents, often charging fees for books, photocopies and sometimes even the cost of administering a test.
Choosing schools
The Mexican public school Rachel could attend is just two blocks from her family's home in Juarez. Rafael Velarde Elementary School is a white and green structure surrounded by a towering wall laced with barbed wire. Inside, teachers handle classes with upwards of 40 students, who are cycled through in two shifts: one in the morning, one in the afternoon.In one first-grade classroom a list of ABCs strung up on the wall was missing letters K through N.
Ortiz said he considered sending Rachel there but thinks his daughter deserves an education in the U.S. She, like he, is a U.S. citizen.
The 28-year-old grew up with his parents, former migrant workers, on the U.S. side. That's where he went to school and where he had been raising his family of three.
But two years ago his wife, a Mexican national, lost her green card. She applied for another, but in the meantime the family had to move back to Juarez. And just about that time Rachel, the oldest, reached school age. Ortiz wanted her somewhere she could learn English.
"As a parent," Ortiz said, "it doesn't matter if you don't make it, just as long as your children do."
He said he owns a vacant house near the elementary school that his daughter attends. That satisfies the residency requirement.
Other cross-border students use the addresses of American friends or relatives. Walking over from Mexico on a recent morning, Laiyin Yee, 14, flashed her Austin High School badge to the border officer at the school lane.
A U.S. citizen, she said she lives in Ciudad Juarez with her parents.
But an aunt has a place in El Paso. She goes there each morning, catching a public bus to class where she is part of a special program for aspiring law enforcement officers.
"It's better here than in Juarez," she said, removing her iPod headphones to talk. "The public schools there, there is too much violence."
Familiar faces
The new student lane at the Paso Del Norte crossing, also known as Santa Fe bridge, opens each morning at 6:30 and closes two hours later, just as classes begin. It is supposed to help reduce the logjam at the crossing, which sees 7 million pedestrians each year.On a recent morning, a border officer named Gilbert Rodriguez manned the student lane.
"American," many of them told him before even being asked. Others just flashed their public school IDs and walked by. Sometimes, Rodriguez said, he'll request proof of citizenship or ask students to name their school mascots — just to check. Mostly he jokes: asking the boys how many girlfriends they have, scolding little ones for eating candy or whistling when he learns a student is studying chemistry.
"Most of these kids come through every day," he said. "You develop a feeling of who is lying to you and who is not lying to you."
Residency checks
There are similar, if less formal, spots such as this all along the border. In Columbus, N.M., just across the state line from El Paso, school officials for years have sent buses to the border checkpoint to pick up students.But in Texas, most schools say they at least try to enforce district residency rules. El Paso ISD has seven officers who check out suspicious addresses, Villalobos said. Still, people complain.
Community pressure elsewhere has, in part, pushed other districts to crack down on those who violate residency requirements. Susan Carlson, spokeswoman for the United ISD in Laredo, said her district's schools are extra vigilant with residency checks and recently began fining students found breaking residency rules.
United ISD is readying for a $400 million bond election next month.
"They will make accusations that if you weren't educating illegal aliens that don't belong here you wouldn't have to have bond elections," she said.
That's an argument echoed nationwide, especially as immigration reform becomes a staple in political stump speeches and rallies.
Good news
Back in El Paso, though, many say the grumblers are a minority.On the other side of the Santa Fe bridge each morning, students from Mexico file onto the city's streets, some walking to a nearby school and others catching buses to class in the city's interior.
Following their familiar trek one day earlier this month, Rachel and her father arrived at Vilas in less than 10 minutes.
Once there, Ortiz kissed his little girl goodbye at the gates and then headed back to Mexico.
He spent the rest of the day working in Juarez for his parents' ministry, which attempts to mend the lives of some of the city's most desperate: the drug addicts and homeless children.
He acknowledges the irony in his desire to move from the city he is trying to fix. But America, he said, is where he sees opportunity for his family.
"I have to teach my girl to grow up the States way and the American way," he said. "Even though we are just a bridge away, it is a totally different culture over there."
Just a few days after that the young father said his wife finally got notice that her papers had been approved. This week they moved out of Juarez and into that home just down the street from Rachel's school — on the American side.
http://www.chron.com/opinion/outlook...ol-1807611.phpLast edited by GeorgiaPeach; 08-26-2016 at 04:35 PM.
Matthew 19:26
But Jesus beheld them, and said unto them, With men this is impossible; but with God all things are possible.
____________________
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08-26-2016, 04:18 PM #6
Mexican Kids Daily Cross Texas Border for Free U.S. Paid Education
Sept. 20, 2007 Warner Todd Houston
At the beginning of September, Channel 5 News revealed a shocking story in Roma, Texas. As their cameras chronicled, each morning dozens of Mexican kids are crossing the border from Mexico into the Texas border town of Roma to attend an American school, free of charge. You read that correctly. American tax money is funding the education of kids who actually live IN Mexico and who are illegally crossing the border every single day to attend U.S. schools. I have waited a suitable period of time to bring this story up, hoping that the national news sources will pick up on this absurd violation of our National sovereignty and misuse of our tax money... yet not a peep has been heard to my knowledge.
It is estimated that $4 million has been spent on Mexican kids just in Roma, Texas, alone. And no one really even knows how much has been thrown down the rat hole in other Texas border towns, not to mentions similar towns in other border states.
News Channel 5 reported on the 6th of September that these Mexican kids are getting a free education from US taxpayers because the county schools do not have very stringent residency requirements. (See video here)
Even more ridiculously, school administrators report that they aren't even allowed to ask if a student is a U.S. citizen before admitting them to class.
The report also reveals that no one in the school system is even bothering to keep track of how many schools are giving a free education to children whose parents are not U.S. taxpayers.
Here is the full Channel 5 report:
Is this not outrageous? I certainly find it so.
Taxpayer Money Used to Educate Mexican Nationals -- Over four million spent in Roma alone
ROMA - An estimated 650 kids from Mexico are going to public school in Roma.
They come to America for a better education.
The annual cost of an education is nearly $7,000 a student, which works out to $4,500,000 spent on Mexican students of your tax dollars spent. That's in Roma alone.
The truth is, no one knows the actual money being spent, because no one is actually keeping track.
The reason? Parents only have to prove U.S. residency once. After that, the student is set until they graduate.
Proving residency is as simple as providing a Roma address.
School administrators say they can't ask if a student is a legal U.S. citizen.
Administrators say American students don't "do without" because of students from Mexico. They tell us the district gets state and federal funding for every student, even those from across the border.
Then, why have the national news services all ignored this story?
http://www.newsbusters.org/blogs/nb/...paid-educationLast edited by GeorgiaPeach; 08-26-2016 at 04:20 PM.
Matthew 19:26
But Jesus beheld them, and said unto them, With men this is impossible; but with God all things are possible.
____________________
Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)
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08-26-2016, 04:25 PM #7
Children born in US cross border from Mexico to receive a U.S. education
@
http://www.alipac.us/children-cross-mexican-border-receive-u-s-education-2283/NO AMNESTY
Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.
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08-26-2016, 04:45 PM #8
Can understand U.S. born children crossing our border to attend school but illegals should not be allowed to attend our schools. Then again, from what I understand for each child sitting in a seat the school get more money. "Just follow the money" as they say.
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08-26-2016, 05:59 PM #9
Most school districts have a law that you must live in the district to send your kids to their schools, regardless of where they were born.
Like people in East L.A. can't send their kids to school in Beverly Hills.NO AMNESTY
Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.
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08-26-2016, 09:34 PM #10Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn
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