NBC News: “Report: Want the Job? Be Able to Say So in More than One Language.”

NBC News: “Report: Want the Job? Be Able to Say So in More than One Language.”

Those looking for a job may want to emphasize their language skills. In the last five years, the demand for employees in the United States who know more than one language has more than doubled, according to a report recently released by the New American Economy. The report, “Not Lost… Read More

Investor Ideas:

Investor Ideas: “Demand for Bilingual Workers More than Doubled in 5 years, New Report Shows.”

Today, New American Economy (NAE) released a report on the growing demand for bilingual talent in major industries in the United States. The research looks at online job posting data acquired by Burning Glass Technologies, a leading labor market analytics firm that searches 40,000 job boards daily. The report shows… Read More

Inside Higher Ed: Report: Job Market Is Strong for Bilingual Workers

Inside Higher Ed: Report: Job Market Is Strong for Bilingual Workers

On the heels of a report from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences urging a national strategy to boost language learning capacity, the New American Economy today released a paper emphasizing the critical need for language skills in the workplace. The bipartisan group of some 500 pro-immigration reform mayors… Read More

Without Migrant Labor, a Minnesota Resort’s 460 U.S. Workers at Risk

Without Migrant Labor, a Minnesota Resort’s 460 U.S. Workers at Risk

Ben Thuringer is the managing director of Madden’s on Gull Lake, a resort founded by his grandfather in 1929 in the Brainerd Lakes Region of Central Minnesota. The family resort is a seasonal getaway, operating April through October, with more than 1,000 acres and 283 rooms. “Of the 520 people… Read More

Resettled Refugees Contribute Millions to Wisconsin Economy

Resettled Refugees Contribute Millions to Wisconsin Economy

Since it first opened its doors in 2012, the Christian nonprofit World Relief Fox Valley has resettled 700 refugees in Appleton and Oshkosh, in Wisconsin. “The communities have been supportive, and anyone who doesn’t support the mission doesn’t understand the program or who refugees are,” says the organization’s director, Tami… 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

Americans Don’t Apply, Wisconsin Dairy Farmer Says

Americans Don’t Apply, Wisconsin Dairy Farmer Says

Paul Fetzer is the fourth-generation owner of his family’s dairy farm, Fetzer Farms, which he operates with his brothers in Elmwood, Wisconsin. With 1,350 cows, the business requires 26 full-time employees, and today 18 of those employees are immigrants. “We’ll put ads out locally trying to attract American-born workers, and… 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

Minister Asks Christian Colleagues to Step Up on Behalf of Immigrants

Minister Asks Christian Colleagues to Step Up on Behalf of Immigrants

During his commute to Texas Christian University, in Fort Worth, religion professor Santiago Piñón passes about 20 churches, many of which have billboards advertising the next Sunday’s sermon. “I have never seen one that said ‘Welcome the Stranger’ or ‘Be Kind to Your Neighbor.’ I would have been there. I… Read More

Without More Foreign Workers, Oregon Vintner Asks, ‘What Will We Do?’

Without More Foreign Workers, Oregon Vintner Asks, ‘What Will We Do?’

In the 1970s, when Patricia Dudley and her husband left academic jobs to grow pinot noir grapes, they ran the small vineyard with family co-owners. “We wanted to be more connected to the natural world and the earth,” says Dudley, president of Bethel Heights Vineyard, in Oregon’s Willamette Valley. “In… Read More

All gifts are matched dollar for dollar up to $75,000

No one should face the immigration system alone

logoimg