California, District 51

California, District 51

Filipino Immigrant Trains Lawyers to the Benefit of Montanans

Filipino Immigrant Trains Lawyers to the Benefit of Montanans

Eduardo Capulong’s father, a prominent politician in the Philippines, had already endured one imprisonment when the family found their house ransacked by police and military forces one October evening. It was 1979, seven years after Ferdinand Marcos—notorious for torturing and killing his opponents—had imposed a martial-law dictatorship. “We fled here,”… Read More

New Americans in San Diego

New Americans in San Diego

Immigrants contributed over $54 billion—25 percent—to the San Diego metro area GDP in 2016, according to a new research brief released by New American Economy in partnership with the City of San Diego, the San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce, and the San Diego Regional Economic Development Corporation. The… Read More

Watch: Tech Entrepreneur Tom Chavez Joins the iMarch

Watch: Tech Entrepreneur Tom Chavez Joins the iMarch

https://youtu.be/2HjuyGUWF2o

Iraq War Vet: Immigrants Critical to Fargo’s Growth

Iraq War Vet: Immigrants Critical to Fargo’s Growth

Around the 2016 presidential election, when some politicians in North Dakota introduced anti-immigration bills, the Fargo City Council and local business community pushed back. The reason: The city’s economic health depends on new Americans. “We have between 5,000 and 8,000 open jobs in Fargo-Moorhead, and we can’t honestly afford to… Read More

U.S. Farmer Moves His Operations South — Where the Workers Are

U.S. Farmer Moves His Operations South — Where the Workers Are

Each winter, an estimated two-thirds of the vegetables consumed in the United States are grown in California’s Imperial Valley. One of the largest operations there is the Scaroni Family of Companies, a multimillion-dollar farming enterprise that employs more than 5,000 people and, according to owner Steve Scaroni,… 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

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