Industries

Industries

Immigrants and Labor Unions are 'Natural Allies,' According to Cornell Union Leadership Institute Co-Director

Immigrants and Labor Unions are ‘Natural Allies,’ According to Cornell Union Leadership Institute Co-Director

Patricia Campos-Medina spoke barely a word of English when she arrived from El Salvador at the age of 14—but within four years, she had won a full scholarship to Cornell, where, after stints as the assistant national political director for the Service Employees International Union, director for the New Jersey State… Read More

Nashville Councilman Recounts His Immigrant Past and Shows Just How Much Determination Can Make a Difference

Nashville Councilman Recounts His Immigrant Past and Shows Just How Much Determination Can Make a Difference

It was a fire in his house that finally convinced Fabian Bedne, now a Nashville councilman and part-owner of an architectural firm that generates up to a quarter of a million dollars in annual business, to become a U.S. citizen. Afterward, he says, “everyone in the community was so… Read More

Cherry Farm’s Ad for American Workers Fails to Get a Single Reply

Cherry Farm’s Ad for American Workers Fails to Get a Single Reply

In the 19th century, Steve Bardenhagen’s great-great-grandfather emigrated from Germany, fought in the Civil War, and was rewarded with the land in northern Michigan that his descendants still farm today. Bardenhagen Berries is now a thriving 180-acre cherry and strawberry farm, with revenues of around $400,000 a year—but Bardenhagen, who… Read More

Migrant Workers Keep New Jersey’s Blueberry Farms Local

Migrant Workers Keep New Jersey’s Blueberry Farms Local

New Jersey’s blueberry crop is worth $79.5 million a year, making it far and away the state’s most lucrative crop — and it is immigrants who help farmers to bring in the harvest, says Dory Dickson, director of the nonprofit group Migrant Worker Outreach. Although some farmers use mechanical harvesting… Read More

People Underestimate How Much Immigrants Contribute, Says Advocate

People Underestimate How Much Immigrants Contribute, Says Advocate

For Sarai Portillo, executive director of the Alabama Coalition for Immigrant Justice (ACIJ),  immigration reform is not only pertinent to our nation’s economic prosperity, it’s also a matter of public safety. When the state’s undocumented population feels high anxiety and stress, and lives in a constant state of fear of… Read More

Send Mexicans Back? ‘That’s Going To Be Difficult on Them and Us,’ Says Texas Real Estate Developer

Send Mexicans Back? ‘That’s Going To Be Difficult on Them and Us,’ Says Texas Real Estate Developer

As the CEO/Principal of Villa Realty Group in The Woodlands, an upscale master-planned community in Houston, longtime Republican Roy Villarreal, Jr. makes his living developing commercial properties with partners — and most of those partners are Mexicans, to whom he has sold a number of million-dollar homes. “These guys enjoy… Read More

Head of University of Louisiana Computer Science Department: 'Our Strength is in Our Diversity'

Head of University of Louisiana Computer Science Department: ‘Our Strength is in Our Diversity’

Magdy Bayoumi, director of the Center for Advanced Computer Studies and head of the Computer Science department at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, was born and raised in Cairo, Egypt—but he always knew he’d to move to America one day. “Since I was in high school, my plan was… Read More

Lawful Status Allows Mexican Immigrant To Help His Neighbors Get the Healthcare They Need

Lawful Status Allows Mexican Immigrant To Help His Neighbors Get the Healthcare They Need

Juan Carlos Diaz grew up in a crowded home in Goshen, Indiana, surrounded by friends and family, some with legal status, some without. It was a blue-collar upbringing. Virtually all the adults he knew worked in Indian’s robust RV manufacturing industry, where four of every five U.S.-made RVs are built… Read More

Cattle Farmer Foresees Heavy U.S. Job Losses if Immigrants Leave

Cattle Farmer Foresees Heavy U.S. Job Losses if Immigrants Leave

As Vice Chairman of the board of United Producers, Inc., a livestock marketing cooperative, Lynn Orr regularly tours meatpacking plants around Ohio, where the workforce is mostly comprised of immigrants. Orr understands that without immigrants, his industry would suffer significantly. Orr is a registered Republican and third-generation farmer who was… Read More

Immigration Policies 'Work Against the Small Businesses,' Says Head of Major South Carolina Restaurant Group

Immigration Policies ‘Work Against the Small Businesses,’ Says Head of Major South Carolina Restaurant Group

Steve Carb is the head of SERG Restaurant Group on Hilton Head Island in South Carolina, which employs more than 800 hospitality workers annually. During the summer peak season, he manages to staff his 10 restaurants with help from locals and college students. But once school starts in the fall,… Read More

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