Stories

Stories

Thanks to DACA, Harrowing Journey of Young Boy Gets a New Ending: a Chance at Law School

Thanks to DACA, Harrowing Journey of Young Boy Gets a New Ending: a Chance at Law School

Today Javier Hernández is a high-achieving college student and legal assistant who will likely pursue a career in law. And yet as a young boy in San Salvador, El Salvador, Hernández’s future wasn’t nearly so bright. In fact, he had one central fear: That when he turned 12… Read More

Once an Undocumented Immigrant, Pennsylvania Town’s First Lady is Giving Back to Her Adoptive Home

Once an Undocumented Immigrant, Pennsylvania Town’s First Lady is Giving Back to Her Adoptive Home

Gisele Fetterman with family. Photo credit: Matthew Hodgman MN. In 2007, when she was in her mid-twenties, Brazilian immigrant Gisele Fetterman read an article about Braddock, Pennsylvania. “I wrote a letter, and the mayor, John Karl Fetterman, wrote back,” she says. Her initial fascination with Braddock was sparked by a… Read More

Chinese Immigrant Wants to Stay in the United States to Strengthen Internet of Things

Chinese Immigrant Wants to Stay in the United States to Strengthen Internet of Things

Even though Yingzhe “Reginald” Fu, 25, just graduated with his master’s degree in mechanical engineering from the University of California, Berkeley in May 2016, the ambitious young man is already developing a company to advance the Internet of Things. That business, FingerBlocks, aims to connect people’s homes to the internet,… Read More

Georgia Farmer Says Broken Immigration Policy Hurts His Bottom Line

Georgia Farmer Says Broken Immigration Policy Hurts His Bottom Line

Bill Brim is a lifelong Georgia farmer who’s beyond frustrated with the immigration system’s agriculture guest worker program. Brim relies on the H-2A visa program to hire about 600 migrant workers from Mexico to help harvest the bell peppers, squash, watermelon, broccoli and other produce that grows on his 6,000-acre,… Read More

Got Milk? In 2014, Half of All U.S. Dairy Workers Were Immigrants

Got Milk? In 2014, Half of All U.S. Dairy Workers Were Immigrants

Olga Reuvekamp is among dozens of immigrants who have bought dairy farms in South Dakota since 2000, helping to stem the decline of milk production in the state. Her 4,500-head farm is dependent on immigrant labor, though, and she says there are no good visas for dairy. In… Read More

Chamber VP Sees Firsthand How Immigrant Businesses Stimulate the Economy

Chamber VP Sees Firsthand How Immigrant Businesses Stimulate the Economy

Gilda Ramirez knows how much immigrants have to contribute to the United States. Her father was born in Mexico but grew up undocumented in Texas. Just after he received a letter of deportation, he was drafted into the U.S. Army and went to fight in Germany during World War II. Read More

California's Primary: Immigrants in the Golden State

California’s Primary: Immigrants in the Golden State

In the final round of state primaries, Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders battle it out today in California. Although Clinton has already clinched the necessary number of delegates to secure the Democratic nomination, there are still 550 delegates on the line. The Golden State has… Read More

Immigrant Workers Vital to North Carolina’s Varied Crops, says NC Farm Bureau President

Immigrant Workers Vital to North Carolina’s Varied Crops, says NC Farm Bureau President

During his decades as a tobacco farmer, Larry Wooten has seen the supply of native-born farm workers gradually wane and immigrant labor become increasingly critical to North Carolina’s agricultural sector. He says the existing seasonal guest-worker program isn’t capable of meeting farmers’ labor needs and that reform is needed to… Read More

Andrés Moreno Founded the Largest Online English School. Let's Welcome More People Like Him

Andrés Moreno Founded the Largest Online English School. Let’s Welcome More People Like Him

At the age of 25, with just $700 in his pocket, Venezuelan-born Andrés Moreno booked a flight to Silicon Valley, California. It was the right move at the right time for the young man. In Menlo Park, Moreno raised money from angel investors, slept on friends’ sofas and spent two… Read More

Economist and College President: Those Students the U.S. Sends Home? They Could be the Next Google

Economist and College President: Those Students the U.S. Sends Home? They Could be the Next Google

Growing up in a middle-class family in Monterrey, Mexico, Jorge Gonzalez saw people living around him in poverty and longed to change the world. Now a respected professor of economics and the newly appointed president of Kalamazoo College, where he oversees more than 100 faculty and some 1,400 undergraduates, he… Read More

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