Stories

Stories

Colombian-American Student Helps U.S. Immigrants Gain Acceptance

Colombian-American Student Helps U.S. Immigrants Gain Acceptance

Alejandro Londoño came to America from Colombia at the age of 6, speaking no English and carrying a pink bag with a radio and some toys. Now 20, she is a U.S. citizen and a senior at Stockton University, where she helped start a program to help immigrants prepare for… Read More

Child of Immigrant Shopkeepers is a Powerful Force for Small Businesses

Child of Immigrant Shopkeepers is a Powerful Force for Small Businesses

Ron Kim grew up working in his parents’ small grocery store in New York City. The family had immigrated to the United States from South Korea in 1987, when Kim was 7 years old. “I saw my parents, both of them, work nonstop,” he says, noting that the store was… Read More

Local Businessman Says, Even with U.S. Citizenship, He’s “Worried”

Local Businessman Says, Even with U.S. Citizenship, He’s “Worried”

Mauricio Roca, is an U.S. citizen. His wife is American, and they have two American children. However, with so much negative rhetoric around immigrants these days, the Mexican-born Roca feels nervous whenever he sees a police officer. “Most Hispanics I know who are living in the United States right now… Read More

Haitian Immigrant Poised to Fill Critical Need for Computer Science Professionals

Haitian Immigrant Poised to Fill Critical Need for Computer Science Professionals

Ever since Sheila Laurore immigrated to the United States from Haiti in 2015, she has been working hard toward her goal: A degree and a job in computer science. “I like that in the United States you have the opportunity to get a better life. You can go to school,… Read More

Chicago Writer Examines Her — and Her Country’s — Refugee Experience

Chicago Writer Examines Her — and Her Country’s — Refugee Experience

Writer Megy Karydes says people are surprised when she tells them she was a refugee. “I look American,” she says. “It’s not as if we wear a T-shirt announcing it.” Although Karydes was born in the United States, her parents, who were Greek citizens, had returned to their home… Read More

‘Companies Appreciate Immigrants,’ Says Colombian Process Engineer

‘Companies Appreciate Immigrants,’ Says Colombian Process Engineer

When new immigrant Diana Valenzuela gets her English up to speed, the United States will be lucky. Back in her native Colombia, she spent 10 years as a process engineer at a leather factory, supervising production and designing the leather finish for shoes, belts, and other products. Afterward, she spent… Read More

Immigration Policy Ineffective for Economic Development, Says Iowa CEO

Immigration Policy Ineffective for Economic Development, Says Iowa CEO

As CEO of the Greater Des Moines Partnership, an economic development organization, Jay Byers is trying to make the region a premier destination for immigrant workers, particularly in job-growth industries like bioscience and advanced manufacturing. “Recruiting international talent, especially in high-skilled industries, is absolutely critical to fueling future economic growth,”… Read More

One Refugee Couple, Dozens of Entrepreneurial Stories

One Refugee Couple, Dozens of Entrepreneurial Stories

Nadia Kasvin came to the United States under the terms of the Lautenberg Amendment, a 1989 policy that allowed Jews and other religious minorities facing persecution in the former Soviet Union to seek asylum in America. Three years after applying, and after numerous background checks and interviews, Kasvin and her… Read More

Americans Forget They Descend From Immigrants, Says Minnesotan

Americans Forget They Descend From Immigrants, Says Minnesotan

Aaron J. Brown, a community college instructor and proud native of Hibbing, Minnesota, says some on the Mesabi Iron Range seem to have forgotten that they are the descendants of immigrants. A century ago, Hibbing was as diverse as New York City is today. “Many great-great-grandparents of Hibbing residents came… Read More

Immigrant Talent Critical To U.S. Dominance, Says Economist

Immigrant Talent Critical To U.S. Dominance, Says Economist

Peter Orazem is an economist and professor at Iowa State University, where he’s taught for 34 years. Orazem’s career has given him insight into how much the United States relies on both high- and low-skilled immigrants to move our economy forward. “We have a country that’s capital rich and labor… Read More

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