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angela256z
04-06-2008, 08:55 PM
Life after an illegal immigrant is sent home
By Lornet Turnbull

Seattle Times staff reporter
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2004330685_mexicoana06m.html

http://i154.photobucket.com/albums/s242/angela256z/2004325188.jpg
Ana Reyes, in red, and daughter Julie spend the evening hours at their roadside stand in Mexico City, waiting for customers willing to pay a few pesos for quesadillas and gorditas they make in an effort to make ends meet. The unsold inventory becomes the family's meal.

http://i154.photobucket.com/albums/s242/angela256z/2004325979.jpg
DEAN RUTZ / THE SEATTLE TIMES

Christian Quiroz, Ana Reyes' son, leaves the two-bedroom house he and his extended family call home. Up to 10 family members sometimes share the home.

MEXICO CITY — Ana Reyes walks briskly through a crowded neighborhood here, out of place among the provocatively dressed women of the night soliciting work in the middle of the day.

The 41-year-old mother of four slips through the entrance of a clothing store, its racks thick with the latest fashion, a sign on the door indicating the shop is hiring female assistants.

She approaches the manager about the job but is told it's only for women 20 to 30 years old.

Manager Maria Inez elaborates when prompted: "A younger girl will be able to bring more male customers into the store. She's too old."

Ten months after she was picked up by immigration officers in an early-morning raid of her Burien home and soon deported to Mexico, Reyes — jobless and broke — struggles to eke out the barest existence in the dirt-poor barrios of one of the world's biggest and most crowded cities.

After nearly two decades picking hops and fruit in Eastern Washington and cleaning hotel rooms near Seattle, she was among more than 870,000 Mexicans the U.S. government expelled from the country last year.

For all the attention illegal immigrants get in the U.S. — from those who believe they're a drain on social services to advocates who say they do the jobs Americans won't — little is known about what happens to them after they're ushered by U.S. immigration authorities through revolving doors into Mexico's border towns.

Once there, they get little help from their government. Many stay, others try to get back to their hometowns. For the most part no one tracks them — not their government, or the U.S., or their advocacy groups in the states. They become largely forgotten — along with the U.S.-born children they sometimes take with them.

Reyes' two adult sons, Christian and Carlos Quiroz, whom she and her then-husband had brought illegally into the U.S. as little boys, were also returned to Mexico last year.

And with no family in the U.S., Reyes' two American daughters, Julie Quiroz, now 13, and Sharise Hernandez, 6, have also joined her here.

Now, unable to find work in a city she left 18 years ago, Reyes shuffles between the cramped homes of a brother and a sister in neighborhoods so unsafe her children aren't allowed outside to play.

Neither daughter is in school.



The older one longs for her life in Seattle, saying that on the rare occasion she gets close enough to the hotels that cater to tourists here, she strains to hear Americans speak. "I always think that if I had the courage I'd go up and talk to them," Julie said.

For her mother, small things, like the Starbucks white-chocolate mocha her son sometimes buys her, remind her of their old life. And some days she thinks of little else but how to get it back.

"It's ugly here," Reyes said, sitting in her sister's living room, her children and other family members around her.

"I never wanted to come back here to live. I wanted to stay and watch my daughters go to school and graduate, have the kind of life I didn't have."

Fuel for economy

The engine of the American service economy runs on the labor of many of the 12 million immigrants in the U.S. illegally.

Many had fled poverty in small towns across Mexico and Latin America, becoming the cheap labor that builds houses, cleans hotel rooms and tends gardens in the U.S.

In recent years, stepped-up immigration enforcement increasingly has led to their arrests in work-site raids, on routine traffic stops, when immigration officers sweep through jails and prisons or, in cases such as Reyes', when they show up at the front door.

"This country simply can't absorb them all," said Neil Clark, Seattle-based field-office director for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, pointing out the U.S. already admits about 1 million legal immigrants a year.

"People have got to demand changes in their home countries if they want to make things better," he said. "Coming to the U.S. is not the solution to Mexico's problems."

Neither, it seems, is deportation.

For Mexico, the return of illegal immigrants is a double punch: The economy loses the deportees' share of some $24 billion that Mexicans abroad send home each year. And back in the small towns they fled, deportees compete for what few low-paying jobs exist.

"Sometimes they leave with much fanfare and dreams of getting the family out of poverty — only to be sent back home, their deportation seen as a failure," said Erica Dahl-Bredine, country manager for Catholic Relief Services Mexico, based in Tucson, Ariz.

So many don't go back home but instead remain in border towns such as Tijuana and Juárez — sometimes because they don't have money for a bus ticket home but mostly because they're waiting for a chance to re-enter the U.S.

It's what Reyes might have done last July if she'd had the money to pay a smuggler to help her return to the U.S. Instead, she returned to her family in Mexico City, buying time while she figures out a way to get back to Seattle.

She'd first come to the attention of U.S. immigration authorities in 1998 when she got into a fight with another woman on a street in the Eastern Washington town of Sunnyside, violating a restraining order.

In 2003, an immigration judge granted her a chance to leave the U.S. voluntarily, saying her daughters were young enough that they could adjust to life in Mexico. She appealed and lost, but never left, she said, because she kept hoping changes in U.S. immigration laws would allow her to stay legally.

She was asleep the morning 10 months ago when a team of Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers knocked on the door of her apartment, her name on their fugitive list for that day.

Among those inside, besides her two daughters, were her younger son, Carlos; her boyfriend and the father of her younger daughter, Arturo Hernandez; and her brother-in-law Luis Hernandez. The men were all returned to Mexico. Reyes' older son was living in Tacoma and deported several months later.

Later, Reyes would remark that if deported, she would not bring her daughters to Mexico because she would not be staying long.

She couldn't have known how bad things would get for her here.

Mexico City as home

The metropolitan area of Mexico City is the second-largest in the world — teeming with congestion, pollution and poverty. The divide between rich and poor is vast.

It is, in so many ways, removed from the green landscape and fresh air of Western Washington, where Reyes lived in an apartment complex and worked as a hotel maid for nearly half her years in the U.S. On good days, she earned about $70 a day, her boyfriend about twice that.

Much of what the family had was left behind in the Burien apartment: a microwave, beds, tables, other furniture. "Everything that I worked really hard for," Reyes said.

Now, in Mexico, home is sometimes her brother's third-floor, two-bedroom apartment near the historic center of the city, where drug dealers and prostitutes hug grimy street corners, conducting business in full view of the police.

Mostly, it's her sister Patricia Reyes' cramped two-bedroom house in Arboledas, a poor neighborhood that is part of the city's stubborn march toward the mountains surrounding it.

The house is like many others throughout the city, joined to those on either side, with the street as its front yard.

Her family lives like many in Mexico's large cities, doubling and sometimes tripling up under the same roof. Up to 10 family members sometimes share her sister's home. Reyes sleeps on a mattress on the floor, a wooden bar braced at the front door to keep rats from scurrying inside.

She is often depressed, her family said.

"We're been back and forth, back and forth," Reyes said. "It's the hardest thing because I had my own place up there, my own car, my own money. I have nothing here."

Looking for work

Reyes' age, long absence from Mexico and lack of a high-school diploma help explain why the hotels, restaurants and stores where she seeks work aren't calling her back.

"I tried the hotel jobs and even when I tell them how much experience I have, I still don't get called," she said. "They say that someone younger will produce more than me."

Susanna Noguez, who works in the protection department in the Mexican consulate office in Seattle, said, "If she has the intention of finding any kind of work, it's not easy, but it's not impossible."

In this city, getting work also depends on whom you know.

Reyes' 68-year-old father slowly shakes his head when asked if he can use his position as a former government worker to help.

"Before, when I was younger, there was lots of work here — enough for everybody," Luis Reyes said. "Now everything has gotten more corrupt ... ."

"The people I can call, they're all retired, like me. They can't help."

So five evenings a week, Reyes does what many of her generation here do to make a living — she peddles on the street.

She and sister Patricia roll a food cart up a dusty street to sell quesadillas for 70 cents, gorditas for 90 cents. On a good night they can clear $20. On this particular one, they had three customers.

One was 28-year-old Santo Lopez, who had been deported from the U.S. only a few months earlier. He had lived for four years in Hope, Ark., he said, holding down jobs in a mechanic shop and at a warehouse.

He's found a food-processing job here that pays $80 for a six-day week but says he could make that same amount in two or three hours in the states.

"I hear they are now jailing people they catch trying to cross the border," he said. "If things get much worse for me here, I might consider just that. Life in detention in the states might be better than it is here."

Lopez bought three quesadillas.

On evenings like these, unsold inventory becomes the family's meal. At the end of every day, everyone in the family pools what money they made that day.

"And that's how we survive," Reyes said. "It's not the life I imagined for my kids."

But many who oppose the presence of illegal immigrants in the U.S. say it's right to deport them and that the hard realities of life across the border are Mexico's to resolve.

"Maybe if the Mexican government was half as concerned about its people in Mexico, so many of them would not be trying to get out," said Ira Mehlman, spokesman for the Federation of American Immigration Reform.

How it began

Reyes grew up in a relatively poor neighborhood near central Mexico City, one of four children.

She didn't finish high school but attended a trade school, where she was trained as a secretary and later got work with the government.

She married young and had her first child at 18 and her second child four years later.

In the late 1980s, her husband followed the wave of Mexicans going north for jobs in the fruit farms in Washington and California.

He crossed illegally and settled in Eastern Washington; she followed in 1990, walking three hours with a smuggler whom her husband had paid $1,000.

She said she was apprehended by U.S. border authorities and promised a work permit, Social Security number and legal status if she would testify against the coyote.

But the smuggler ended up admitting to the charges and the deal for the green card was off, though Reyes was granted what most illegal immigrants covet — a valid Social Security number and a work permit, which would expire a few months later.

The couple settled outside Yakima in Sunnyside, where they worked in the hops fields, then picked apples and cherries.

About a year later, they sent for their boys, 7 and 3 at the time, paying a coyote to guide the children through the desert.

But authorities stopped the boys and the smuggler. The children, now grown, speak of spending days in foster homes, separated from one other and afraid, before their father came from Washington and all three crossed with a coyote.

Reyes' relationship with her husband grew strained, and in the winter of 1998, he moved without the family to Western Washington.

With no money, she and her children were evicted from their Sunnyside apartment. They moved in with Arturo Hernandez, who was renting a small trailer in the same town.

Together, in 2001, they followed other Mexican fruit pickers to the construction, restaurant and hotel jobs in and around Seattle. Reyes landed a job at SeaTac Crest Motor Inn, where Manager Karl Singh calls her a "really hard and honest worker."

"We still miss her," he said.

Plotting their return

Soon after she was deported, Reyes, the girls and her younger son went to live with Hernandez and his family in a small town outside Aguascalientes, some 300 miles northwest of Mexico City.

It is here they sometimes return when they need to give her brother and sister some space. When they arrive, the two-bedroom house Hernandez shares with his extended family comes alive. Reyes and the kids say they feel safer here. There are other children for the girls to play with and they can walk the few blocks to the neighborhood store.

Hernandez, who had been employed by a Tacoma boat builder for $20 an hour, now starts his days tending his father's horses and goats. He's not found a job because all seem to require the high-school diploma he doesn't have.

He had gone to the U.S. when he was 16, making enough to send money back to his aging parents every two weeks.

"Now I'm back and there's nothing here," he said. "My parents have to help me because I have no money."

His mother said she was apprehensive when he left. "He was still a boy," Maria Pilar said. "I prayed that he would be fine."

When his mother first learned he was being deported, she was at once happy because she would be seeing him again and devastated by what she knew were dim prospects.

So he and Reyes, along with her grown sons, haven't stopped plotting ways to get back to Seattle.

She thinks her only chance of doing that legally is years away and hinges on daughter Julie, whom she thinks can petition for her when she turns 21.

But it's not that simple: Because Reyes lived illegally in the states for 17 years, she faces a 10-year bar to legal entry. So Julie would have to be 23 and have a home established in the U.S. before she could petition for her mother to join her.

Reyes and Hernandez are considering an offer from an Edmonds real-estate investor who learned of their circumstances and has offered to help them relocate to Juárez. The girls could stay with a family in El Paso, Texas, and attend school there during the week. But the idea of seeing her mother only on weekends worries Julie.

A few months ago, it was a different plan — to cross illegally with a group of people who had been deported from Phoenix.

Then they heard that a cold front had passed through the desert, leaving four people dead of exposure. And they found out that U.S. immigration authorities are now jailing — not just catching and releasing — those caught sneaking across the border.

So that plan, at least for now, is on hold.

Lornet Turnbull: 206-464-2420 or lturnbull@seattletimes.com

angela256z
04-06-2008, 08:58 PM
An American teen in a foreign land
By Lornet Turnbull
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2004330695_mexicojulie06m.html

Seattle Times staff reporter; Seattle Times staff reporter

http://i154.photobucket.com/albums/s242/angela256z/2004325972.jpg
DEAN RUTZ / THE SEATTLE TIMES

As many as 10 members of an extended family stay in Patricia Reyes' two-bedroom home in Mexico City. From left are Luis Reyes, the family patriarch; Ana Reyes' daughter Sharise; Ana Reyes; her sons Christian and Carlos; and her daughter Julie.

http://i154.photobucket.com/albums/s242/angela256z/2004325978.jpg
DEAN RUTZ / THE SEATTLE TIMES

Ana Reyes worries about daughter Julie, 13, who is not assimilating well into Mexican society. She has dropped out of school and rarely ventures out of the house during the day.
Related

MEXICO CITY — The morning immigration officers came for Ana Reyes, her 12-year-old daughter pleaded with them not to take her mother away.

Julie Quiroz was to graduate from grade school in Burien that day last June.

It was her mother's 41st birthday.

"It was a pretty bad day," recalls Julie, now 13. "I think I was the only kid without my mom at graduation."

More than a week later, Reyes was deported, returning to this city she'd left 17 years earlier. She had not wanted her two daughters, Julie and 6-year-old Sharise, to join her on the government flight to Mexico: "I didn't want them to see me cuffed and shackled."

So the girls came later after Reyes led them to believe it would be only a short vacation.

Neither girl is in school.

"I hate it here," said Julie, shifting easily between Spanish and English.

"We can't go out anywhere; it's so dangerous. I was walking down the street the other day, and these men started whistling at me."

Estimates show 3 million American children have at least one parent living in the U.S. illegally. And while little is known about what happens to these parents after they are deported, even less is known about what becomes of their American-born children.

"You have to think the number has got to be pretty big, considering that the number of families with kids who have been deported in recent years is several hundred thousand," said Randy Capps, of the nonpartisan Urban Institute, who co-authored a report last year about the impact of work-site raids on children.

Whose duty?



Critics of U.S. immigration policies call them "anchor babies," saying they tie their parents to a host of government benefits and, once they turn 21, can sponsor their parents for legal status.

And it's the parents of these children, they say, who should be held responsible for what happens to them.

"Obviously everybody empathizes with these kids ... but no legitimate U.S. policy can take the place of parental responsibility," said Ira Mehlman, spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration Reform.

"It's unreasonable to ask the United States to assume all these burdens that result from parents' decision to break the law."

But others believe the U.S. has a duty to these children.

"We are better people than that to hold the sins of the parents against these kids," said Seattle immigration attorney Steve Miller.

When facing deportation, most parents leave their children in the U.S. with a spouse or extended family. A few, once deported, move to border communities such as Juárez, so their kids can attend school on the U.S. side.

An unknown number, like Reyes, take their children with them.

While these kids derive Mexican citizenship from their parents, it gets them precious little in the impoverished towns and cities their parents had fled.

Advocates worry that if the children remain for long in places such as Mexico, they will lose their English skills, fall behind at school and be unable to get a good job later in the U.S.

"As adults, they will be traveling with passports that say they were born in Washington, but will speak no English or English with an accent, raising a red flag with immigration authorities," said Brent Renison, an Oregon immigration attorney.

"They are going to get hassled — even put into custody. ... Those are the difficulties that lie ahead for these kids. We already see it happening."

"Nobody to call"

In the U.S., Julie was the typical American kid, hanging out with friends at the mall or at the library when her mother would let her.

She had lived in the same Burien apartment complex since her family moved to Western Washington in 2001 and had many friends there.

"I was always on the phone, burning up the minutes," she said. "Here I have nobody to call."

She's made no friends in this city where her family lives in neighborhoods so unsafe she never leaves the house without an adult. Her mother worries she and her sister might be kidnapped — or worse.

When a friend from the U.S. sends money, they sometimes go to Pizza Hut or McDonald's, Julie said. "We don't get to go on those trips often because there's no money.

"There's no going to the movies. I'm inside all the time. It's not the same as over there."

A few weeks after she arrived in Mexico, Julie enrolled in the seventh grade.

But she dropped out after two weeks because, she said, she's unable to read or write Spanish well and couldn't keep up. "The teacher said, 'I will help you; you've got to try.' But I would just get mad. ... "

She said the only class she enjoyed was English and she enjoyed talking to the teacher. "Actually, I knew more than her," she said, laughing. "They were doing things that kindergarten kids do in the states: 'Color a tree and write tree at the bottom.'

"I kept asking, why am I here?"

Her mother, equally frustrated, said, "I'd see her come home crying every day" after school. "She was not happy there."

The Mexican government operates a joint program, supported by the U.S., that seeks to provide basic education to students who migrate between the two countries. While it offers Spanish-as-a-second-language instruction for children who speak an indigenous language, it has no such program for those such as Julie who primarily speak English.

Yolo Brito, a coordinator with the Binational Migrant Education Program, said there are many children like Julie enrolled in Mexican schools who speak and understand Spanish but can't read or write it.

Programs must be created, she said, for students who must "learn Spanish as a second language in order to succeed."

Fading friendships

It bothers Julie that her little sister, who'd just finished kindergarten in the U.S., is already losing her English skills. "I talk to her in English and she responds back to me in Spanish," Julie said.

With no school, Julie begins her days around 11 a.m., when she has breakfast and flips on a small television.

Sometimes, she'll go online, if there's enough time left on the Internet-access card the family sometimes buys — their one connection to an old life.

But increasingly, she's found her old friends aren't returning her e-mails. Now that they are in middle school, she says, they've made other friends, and "I think many of them have forgotten about me."

Lornet Turnbull: 206-464-2420 or lturnbull@seattletimes.com

DeBenny
04-06-2008, 09:37 PM
These articles are really good. I just forwarded them to some of my friends. I hope that these types of articles begin to become common and put a human face to all of this.

tasksgirl
04-06-2008, 10:20 PM
"I hear they are now jailing people they catch trying to cross the border," he said. "If things get much worse for me here, I might consider just that. Life in detention in the states might be better than it is here."


wow..

tasksgirl
04-06-2008, 10:26 PM
I totally just messaged her on myspace .. I invited her to the site maybe they can find some info about moving to a border city.. I just feel so bad for the family..

ratito921
04-06-2008, 11:35 PM
it's such a sad story and there are so many others like it. It's a shame that their own country doesn't care about their people enough to make things better. you know? preaching to the choir I know, it just makes me really sad

Luckysprite
04-07-2008, 12:32 AM
An American teen in a foreign land
By Lornet Turnbull

Critics of U.S. immigration policies call them "anchor babies," saying they tie their parents to a host of government benefits and, once they turn 21, can sponsor their parents for legal status.


Isn't this incorrect though - because I thought that I have read on the site that child can not fill out a 601 waiver for their parents??! Maybe I am mistaken ...

So, if their parents initially EWI and do not fall under 245i, then there really is no way the children could petition for them ... since they would need a waiver to adjust?!?

Makes a pretty broad, incorrect statement then, right? Perhaps these 'critics' of immigration should verse themselves in the actual policies rather than spreading un-truths!

Luckysprite
04-07-2008, 12:46 AM
I know I am answering my own thread - but that statement about anchor babies makes me mad - and I just wanted proof that it is not correct.

So who is the qualifying relative? It depends on the ground of inadmissibility. A waiver for prior unlawful presence (INA 212(a)(9)(B)(v)) or misrepresentation (INA 212(i)) requires it to be established that "the refusal of admission to such immigrant alien would result in extreme hardship to the citizen or lawfully resident spouse or parent of such alien," whereas a waiver for criminal history (INA 212(h)) requires it to be established "that the alien's denial of admission would result in extreme hardship to the United States citizen or lawfully resident spouse, parent, son, or daughter of such alien."


Courtesy of: http://discuss.ilw.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/902603441/m/16910588241/r/76710669241 (I know, I know, its from ILW - but its Laurel's memo - and the first site that popped it up for me when I searched!!)

I guess it just depends on what the parents grounds of inadmissability were ... but for unlawful presense this states that the qualifying relative must be the spouse or parent ... not a child.

tasksgirl
04-07-2008, 01:03 AM
I know hun that always makes me mad too and is the first thing I want to say whenever someone brings that up!!!!!!! ITS LITERALLY UNTRUE !!!!!!!!!!

Luckysprite
04-07-2008, 01:10 AM
The term 'chain migration' makes me upset to.

I know that it happens -- you legalize and want to bring other relatives over - but it also takes literally YEARS in many cases and is not just so cut and dry ... not like it happens overnight and yet they want us to believe that it does ...

Like Ratito said - I know I am preaching to the choir here ... but UGH!

J3NNI
04-07-2008, 01:23 AM
It is horrible that the US can do this to families
Jenni

losguerra
04-07-2008, 01:35 AM
Re: "Anchor babies". Few things make me angrier than this term. Not only is it practically impossible for parents to gain any benefits from them (as Luckysprite has already pointed out), but this term is used to dehumanize babies who have absolutely no say at all and are just as deserving of a happy life as any other baby on the planet.

Re: "Chain Migration" - most people probably don't realize that this is one of the only ways an otherwise everyday person can legally immigrate to the US. The few other options leave it far outside a person's reach to legally immigrate.

I'm getting so tired of reading articles on immigration in the US because they are so frequently flawed. We would expect journalists to be fully educated on the topic they write about, but sadly, this isn't the case. :(

nineten
04-07-2008, 05:47 AM
(This assistance is only for deportees to get to their hometowns and get shelter/medical temporarily.)

Mexican government pledges aid to migrants expelled from U.S.


ASSOCIATED PRESS

5:58 p.m. March 31, 2008

TIJUANA, Mexico – Undocumented migrants deported from the United States will be eligible for free transportation back to their hometowns and other services under a new program launched by the Mexican
government.

Migrants arriving in the city of Tijuana, across the border from San Diego, will now be offered free tickets home,....

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/mexico/20080331-1758-mexico-migrants.html

simply-heartfelt
04-07-2008, 05:48 AM
Maybe some of the very talented and educated people on this site need to write some articles and see if they can't find some papers to run them.... along with the evidence to back up the claims.

I would be willing to help if anyone here thinks something like this would be possible.

angela256z
04-07-2008, 06:19 AM
I did include the email of the writer if anyone would like to email her.

jsierra1982
04-07-2008, 01:48 PM
i'm glad that this got news coverage...people here need to see the human side of illegal immigration.

rat, i love your avatar.