4:15 pm By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Labor|New York · 28 Comments
27 Dec 2009I don’t why people are surprised or fail to make the link. Long Island, while geographically includes parts of NYC, specifically Brooklyn and Queens, really means east of those boroughs, Nassau and Suffolk County specifically. Suffolk County is where Marcelo Lucero was killed. In the fall, the Southern Poverty Law Center released a report revealing just how rampant anti-Latino/anti-immigrant sentiment was in the county where Lucero lived and died.
Oyster Bay, Nassau County, Long Island has now put into effect an ordinance that pretty much makes it illegal to exist as a Latino outside your home. From the NY Times:
This Nassau County town of 300,000 people has passed perhaps the most stringent of ordinances attempting to control immigrant day laborers: a law that makes even waving one’s hand punishable by a $250 fine.
“The term ‘solicitation of employment’ includes, but is not limited to, shouting at cars, waving arms or signs, making hand signals, approaching motor vehicles or standing in public roads facing in the direction of oncoming traffic,” reads Ordinance 205-32, which the Town Board passed unanimously Sept. 29.
10:31 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Cities|economy|Immigration|Labor · 1 Comment
30 Nov 2009
One of the biggest excuses given for why the undocumented are so bad is that “they” are bad for the economy. They take resources in disproportionate amounts compared to their population. A report released tells a much different story for the 25 largest urban areas in the United States.
In the 25 largest metropolitan areas combined – comprising more than half of the country’s Gross Domestic Product, and two thirds of all immigrants – foreign-born workers are responsible for 20 percent of economic output and make up 20 percent of the population. The same basic relationship holds true, with slight variation, for each of the 25 areas, from metro Pittsburgh, where immigrants represent 3 percent of population and 4 percent of GDP, to metro Miami, where immigrants make up 37 percent of the population and 38 percent of GDP. The report for the first time estimates immigrant share of Gross Domestic Product in metro areas, based on wage and salary earnings plus proprietors’ income.
9:28 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|Justice|Labor|New York City · Comments Off
25 Oct 2009
In my hood street vendors are part of the landscape. I love that I can buy and eat elotes, tacos, ice cream, tamales, puerco, tacos and buy socks and flowers all on the same block. Pero the harassment of these vendors is also part of the landscape. I know when there are undercover police nearby when the mujer that sells water and the mujer that sells churros all cover their wares under garbage bags in an effort to make themselves look like normal shoppers and avoid being ticketed. I don’t have statistics but most of the street vendors I know and see are immigrants trying to survive. Tomorrow there will be a protest in the Bronx in support of street vendors, demanding that the city finally move on increasing the current caps and to temporarily stop the outrageous fines.
Date & Time: Monday, October 26, 2009 at 11:30 am
Location: Supreme Court House, 851 Grand Concourse, Bronx, NY (Corner of 161st Street and Grand Concourse on the steps of the Court House)
Street Vendors From Across NYC Demand an Increase of the Caps and a Temporary Stop to Cruel Fines
Bronx, New York – Hundreds of Street Vendors will be gathering in the Steps of the Supreme Court House in the Bronx to demand that the city finally move on increasing the current caps and to temporarily stop the outrageous fines. Street vendors in the Fordham Road area in the Bronx have almost disappeared temporarily as the 46th and the 52 precinct increased their raids and fines. Relationships with both precinct deteriorated this summer as constant raids and absurdly high fines began being imposed on the street vendor community in the recent months.
The lack of permits has forced many vendors to sell without cart licenses which in turn causes arrests and summons of up to $3,000.00. With the upsurge of job losses in the past year, an increasing number of people have turned to street vending as a means of work. The result has been an intensified crackdown of street vendors that cannot access the cart permits by police and the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. Street vendors have had to face an upsurge of arrests, fines, and confiscations of merchandise.
“Street vendors are working families, we have been asking the Bloomberg administration to increase the current caps and to decrease the current fines for the past 3 years to no avail,” states Rafael Samanez, Director of VAMOS Unidos. “Their enforcement only solutions further criminalize working families trying to survive,” he added.
Street vendors organizations have began meeting with the offices of Melissa Mark Viveritto, Senator Serrano, Assemblyman Nelson Castro, Senator Squadron, and other high profile political figures in New York to begin addressing the current dire situation that street vendors have to face in a daily manner.
VAMOS Unidos, Street Vendor Project and Esperanza del Barrio, three street vendor organizations in New York City will be holding a succession of events to bring attention to this grave situation street vendors face.
Image Via/ MetroMix
7:34 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Labor|Media|New York City · Comments Off
21 Oct 2009Local NYC PBS station Channel 13 is highlighting how the city that never sleeps does it through videos featuring those that keep it moving.
New York on the Clock: Carlos, Coffee Man from Thirteen.org on Vimeo.
On the clock is a euphemism for on the job, working. Pero isn’t this how so many see Latino faces already in NYC and around the country? Immigrants who work? I guess I’m a little tired of what I see as the work personal divide. I want to know is Carlos making ends meet? Is he sending money back to Mexico? He works in a busy section of NYC catering to business types pero where does he live? Most likely in a community like where I live and that is the side that most people don’t see.
Via / NY On the Clock
6:50 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|Labor|New York City|Puerto Rico · Comments Off
15 Oct 2009NYC LCLAA
JOIN!
UNITY LABOR RALLY!
&
PRESS EVENT!STAND UP IN SOLIDARITY!
TO STOP THE MASSIVE LAYOFFS
OF OUR UNION BROTHERS & SISTERS
IN PUERTO RICO!DEFEND PUERTO RICAN WORKERS RIGHTS!
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2009
12 NOON
CITY HALL STEPSFor more information – NYC LCLAA – 212-701-9400
NCPRR NYC CHAPTER SPONSORED EVENT
Thursday October 15, 2009
TIME
5:00 PM
LOCATION
Puerto Rican Federal Affairs Administration
135 W 50Th St.
New York City
12:08 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · economy|Labor|Puerto Rico · Comments Off
14 Oct 2009Puerto Rico has been feeling the effects of the global recession and its impact hits harder thanks to it’s colonial status. Record unemployment has been boosted thanks to pro-statehood governor Luis Fortuño laying off around 17,000 earlier this month, bringing the total number of people fired on the island close to 25,000. This has led to massive popular action in the streets of the isla del encanto and there is a general strike called for tomorrow, October 15th.
There are a number of solidarity events, especially here in NYC so stay tuned for updates.
Via / Global Voices
1:14 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Immigration|Labor|Washington DC · 6 Comments
9 Sep 2009

Immigrants You Need to Wait This Much
Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., has decided to delay introducing legislation to overhaul the nation’s immigration laws in hopes of bringing more senators on board and crafting a bipartisan bill, his spokesman said Tuesday…”We are pleased with the framework we have put together so far and the broad-based support it has gotten from a diverse group of those interested in this issue,” [Brian] Fallon said. “The fact that health care is taking longer than expected gives us additional time to now shop our ideas to a number of Republicans to see what they think and what changes they suggest.”
8:56 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Immigration|Labor|Women · 2 Comments
7 Sep 2009
Continuing thinking about labor on labor day, I would like to turn your attention to the struggles of mujeres, primarily immigrants, who work inside the homes of other women.
Immigrant women workers today form a pillar of the middle-class family. As nannies, housekeepers and other domestic workers, their status is defined by the strangely intimate nature of their work combined with structural discrimination. A new study presents at their hidden plight in a new light: as a driver of the advancement of the mothers they serve.
There is much talk still in mainstream feminist circles on the work at home vs stay at home mommy divide. Within these discussions however there is little if any analysis of how some women get to make this very decision and who takes the role of housekeeper and child care provider. It certainly isn’t the men of the household, assuming there is even a man in the picture. Rather it is immigrant women who often have never had the luxury of making a choice to stay home or to work outside the home.
7:40 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Chile|Labor|Music · Comments Off
7 Sep 2009I woke up this morning thinking about the history of Labor Day in the United States. How is it that in the U.S. we don’t celebrate May Day and instead have taken this weekend in September and made it about bbq’s and last trips to the beach? Don’t get me wrong, I love some grilled carne and playa, but it seems like this U.S. holiday was rushed into existence in an effort to distract from real issues for the working/laboring class and purposely separated from May Day which reminds workers of the violence often unleashed upon them when they stand up with one voice.
Already the mainstream news media is turning the end of summer, the start of fall into a holiday of fear, recalling the horrors of 9-11-01 while denying other, earlier September horrors that are related thanks to the the politics of imperialism. Maybe that’s why when I woke up this morning I was thinking of Victor Jara and his musical legacy, how his art composed with the labor struggles of workers in Chile led to his murder. I am thinking of Amanda and Manuel in the song Te Recuerdo Amanda recognizing the Amandas and Manuels I see everyday in my family, on my block, in my community.
10:25 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · economy|Labor|Money|Puerto Rico · 15 Comments
26 Aug 2009
For as long as I have believed in self-determination for Puerto Rico, I have thought that talk about the island becoming the 51st state was just that, talk. This is partially because of issues of race and identity. Despite the post-racial times the U.S. finds itself in (allegedly), the U.S. will not accept a brown, Spanish speaking nation as a state. I also think though, that annexation isn’t attractive because economically, Puerto Rico isn’t attractive. Claro, the island has been exploited economically, pero statehood would require the U.S. to invest more than it would get back from the island. Just take a look at the unemployment numbers coming out of la isla del encanto:
The unemployment rate in Puerto Rico stands at 16.5 percent, the highest of all U.S. jurisdictions, and the government is announcing even more layoffs of public employees.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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