Industries

Industries

Alabama’s Anti-Immigrant Policies Have Hurt American Construction Companies—and the State’s Economy

Alabama’s Anti-Immigrant Policies Have Hurt American Construction Companies—and the State’s Economy

Bill Caton, chief operating officer of the Alabama AGC—a non-residential construction association of more than 800 contractors, construction managers, and suppliers—says the state’s anti-immigration policies have created major problems for his industry—one that has a $10 billion annual economic impact on the state. “Until the state passed laws that made… Read More

British Chef Cooks Up the Quintessential American Dream 

British Chef Cooks Up the Quintessential American Dream 

British immigrant Mark Elliott opened his first restaurant, Elliott’s on Linden, in the fall of 2000, serving up southern staples such as shrimp and grits alongside more creative culinary endeavors like elk chops with lemon-sage marmalade and pomegranate jus. The fine-dining eatery was a hit: Within months, Elliott… Read More

This Manufacturing Giant Didn't Leave, But it Needs More Immigrant STEM Workers to Stay in the Country and Succeed

This Manufacturing Giant Didn’t Leave, But it Needs More Immigrant STEM Workers to Stay in the Country and Succeed

Jennifer Sharp has an unusual title for an engineering company: Immigration Specialist. Her company, Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories (SEL), designs and manufacturers products that protect power grids around the world. It is one of the largest employers in southeast Washington state, with 2,600 employees at its Pullman headquarters and 4,500 employees… Read More

Reform Allowing Immigrants To Study and Work Would Boost Community Output, Says Mexican-American Volunteer

Reform Allowing Immigrants To Study and Work Would Boost Community Output, Says Mexican-American Volunteer

After Angelica Velasquez’s father came to the United States from Mexico at age 20, he was deported several times. But he returned, married, and started a construction business. “He’s a contributor. Plus, they raised me and my five siblings, and we’re all great contributors,” says Velasquez, 41, the human resources… Read More

New American Economy on the Protect and Grow American Jobs Act

New American Economy on the Protect and Grow American Jobs Act

  CONTACT Sarah Roy, New American Economy, [email protected] “This bill takes an important step toward updating the H-1B visa program to help ensure that companies are hiring foreign talent for their skills and expertise and not for wage reasons. We support this effort, and call on Congress to reform our… Read More

How An Indian Immigrant Is Fundamentally Transforming Alabama’s Auto Industry

How An Indian Immigrant Is Fundamentally Transforming Alabama’s Auto Industry

After close to four decades in the auto industry, including a position running global research for Mercedes-Benz in Germany, Indian immigrant Bharat Balasubramanian, moved to Alabama. Today, he is executive director of the Center for Advanced Vehicle Technologies at the University of Alabama, an inter-disciplinary research center dedicated to the… Read More

Patricia Serrano’s Son Just Graduated from Williams College, But She Couldn’t Attend the Ceremony

Patricia Serrano’s Son Just Graduated from Williams College, But She Couldn’t Attend the Ceremony

As an undocumented immigrant who came to southern California from Mexico 22 years ago, Patricia Serrano has achieved part of the American dream: She raised a son who recently graduated from prestigious Williams College in western Massachusetts. However, she could not fly cross-country to see him receive his diploma, because… Read More

International Students Are U.S. Business' Best Hope For Growth

International Students Are U.S. Business’ Best Hope For Growth

This week, as anti-immigrant rhetoric continues to permeate the national debate, hundreds of thousands of international students will say goodbye to the United States to return, degrees in hand, to their home countries. Far from being a drain on the American economy or threat to U.S. jobs, these talented graduates—disproportionately… Read More

Immigrant Families Keep a Small Town’s Church — and its Manufacturing Base — Alive

Immigrant Families Keep a Small Town’s Church — and its Manufacturing Base — Alive

For 20 years, leaders of the predominantly white Trinity United Methodist Church in Dalton, Georgia, had had little luck attracting congregants from the town’s growing immigrant community. Today, that’s changing. A few Hispanic families have now helped the church earn a significant level of trust among the Latino community, says… Read More

International Students Are U.S. Business' Best Hope For Growth

International Students Are U.S. Business’ Best Hope For Growth

This week, as anti-immigrant rhetoric continues to permeate the national debate, hundreds of thousands of international students will say goodbye to the United States to return, degrees in hand, to their home countries. Far from being a drain on the American economy or threat to U.S. jobs, these talented graduates—disproportionately… Read More

Make a contribution

Make a direct impact on the lives of immigrants.

logoimg