12:42 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · children|Immigration|mexico · Comments Off
19 Dec 2006
When the dust had barely settled in post-Katrina New Orleans, the city was already buzzing with anti-immigrant rhetoric as a result of an influx of Mexican workers contracted to help in the clean-up efforts. Now it seems that this chain of events has led to an unexpected demographic change in the area — a Latino baby boom:
A little more than a year after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans is seeing a boom in its Latino population, with many coming to help reconstruct the city.Health officials had not anticipated the surge in the city’s Latino population, The New York Times reported.
In a demographic twist, hundreds of Latino babies are being born in New Orleans to immigrant Latino workers, both legal and illegal. In a city largely abandoned by its doctors after the storm, this new population adds a financial strain to the already struggling city.
According to UPI, physicians are struggling to meet the rising demand for their services as a result of the birth of nearly 250 new babies per month.
Via / Playfuls.com
A report released February 28 by the National Council of la Raza states that the disaster didn’t stop for the Latino community after Hurricana Katrina pased through, that it continues into today. The report, titled In the Eye of the Storm: How the Government and Private Response to Hurricane Katrina Failed Latinos states that a big reason why Latinos were left behind in the rescue and post Katrina aid effort was because of a lack of understanding about exactly how many Latinos were in the Gulf Region. Evacuation warnings in English went unheeded by the estimated 230,000 Latinos in the region. Notices may have been done in Spanish because initially the numbers of Latinos was put at about 100,000.
9:17 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration|race|society · Comments Off
18 Jan 2006
Ray Nagin, that’s who. Or at least that’s what he says:
“If I offended anyone, I sincerely apologize,” the mayor, who is black, said Tuesday. “I need to be more sensitive and more aware of what I’m saying.
“I want everybody to be welcome in New Orleans — black, white, Hispanic, Asian — because that’s the kind of city that we deserve going forward,” he said. “
You’re forgiven, Ray. And expect a check from Nesquik and ChocoMilk in a couple days.
Via / ABCNews.com
6:56 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration|race|society · 4 Comments
17 Jan 2006
New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin is at it again. He’s surfacing now to promote not just the rebuilding of New Orleans (I thought he had moved to Dallas?), but the rebuilding of a “Chocolate New Orleans”.
WTF?
“I don’t care what people are saying Uptown or wherever they are. This city will be chocolate at the end of the day,” Nagin said in a Martin Luther King Jr. Day speech. “This city will be a majority African-American city. It’s the way God wants it to be.”
12:59 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration · Comments Off
3 Nov 2005
I’ve had occasion in the past to compare the situations faced by new Latino immigrants to this country to those faced by Eastern European immigrants at the turn of the century in Upton Sinclair’s legendary work “The Jungle”. I find myself turning again to this comparison upon reading reports of conditions for Latino migrant workers charged with cleanup in the Gulf states post-Katrina:
Once he got to Mississippi, Rafael said, he found things much different than promised. He said he was expected to work about 75 hours a week demolishing a casino in Biloxi but was never paid overtime. He said he received about $740 a week for the grueling work, and when he got sick for four days, his pay was suspended. He also said that the contractor still owes him for two weeks of work.
12:00 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration|Politics · 1 Comment
25 Oct 2005
San Diego Tribune writer Ruben Navarrette has something to say about Mayor Nagin’s distress over New Orleans being “overrun by Mexicans” as a result of an influx of migrant workers to the area for clean-up efforts post-Katrina:
Before Katrina, New Orleans was only about 3 percent Latino. Now, demographers say the city’s Latino population could swell to four or five times that amount.
That comes as a bolt of bad news for black leaders nostalgic for a city and a culture that for all practical purposes no longer exists…Nagin told reporters that his new worry is how he is going to “ensure that New Orleans is not overrun by Mexican workers.”
The thing is, many of the city’s former residents say that they have no desire to go back.
So why is he looking a gift horse in the mouth? Here Nagin is having trouble getting people to move to New Orleans, and there’s one group that’s already doing it. They’re ready to work hard, pay taxes and build a new New Orleans.
I, as a native Louisianian, will be the first to say that I would be saddened by the loss of any piece of New Orleans’ culture, and as person of color would be doubly saddened by the disappearance of the black community’s contribution to the richness of the city. But why does the influx of Latino workers have to necessarily mean the disappearance of black culture and the “real” New Orleans?
While I agree with Navarrette’s fury over comments by Mayor Nagin (that I myself have qualified as racist on this blog), I disagree with him on the fact that black culture in the city “for all practical purposes no longer exists”. The essence of New Orleans will exist forever, no matter who occupies the city. Louisiana, and New Orleans in particular, boasts cultural and historical richness unparalleled by any other state in the nation, and a huge part of that has to do with people of black and creole heritage. In my opinion, people may leave New Orleans, but that will remain, and the call for prodigal sons to return will continue. A recent New York Times article talked about the “exiles” of Katrina, mostly working-class blacks who, forced to migrate to be able to sustain themselves, have found that life outside of the state is very different. It’s because Louisiana is a special place. It has its own culture and people will return. I believe this.
Beyond my own predictions, why is it so hard for Nagin and Jackson to swallow the fact that Latinos will inhabit New Orleans? The same thing has happened gradually in every state in the country and none of these places have “lost their identity” as a result.
Via / Newsleader.com
6:27 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration · 4 Comments
20 Oct 2005
In a previous post, I commented on the hypocrisy of New Orleans’ mayor Ray Nagin’s remarks on Mexican workers’ role in the reconstruction of the city post-Katrina. Today, the United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce officially denounced the comments via press release:
USHCC Deplores Remarks by New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin Regarding Mexican Workers and the Rebuilding of New Orleans
Washington, DC–(HISPANIC PR WIRE)–October 19, 2005–In response to recent comments by New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin regarding Mexican workers and their efforts to the clean-up and rebuilding of the city, the Unites States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce (USHCC) issued the following statement:
“At a time when this great country has united to lend a helping hand to those affected by the ravages of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the USHCC, finds the recent public statement by New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin to be offensive, divisive and highly inappropriate.
Mr. Nagin’s reference to ‘make sure that New Orleans is not overrun by Mexican workers,’ published in the Friday, October 7th edition of The Dallas Morning News, is simply unacceptable during a time of national unity and support in which national Hispanic organizations, such as the USHCC and countless others, are donating funds, time and resources to the clean-up and rebuilding of this incredibly diverse and dynamic city. To be confronted with comments of this nature that highlight prejudice and division, coming from a public official that represents an important minority group, is a huge disappointment.
Read the whole release at Hispanic PR Wire
Via / Hispanic Tips
3:00 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration|mexico|Politics · 9 Comments
18 Oct 2005
Throughout the Katrina ordeal, America’s eyes were opened to two ugly realities of our country’s Gulf Coast region: poverty and racism. We’ve come to know that in many cases, these two things go hand-in-hand. Community leaders were vocal about the link between the goverment’s slow response and the fact that the affected area was largely populated by poor black people.
Now Katrina is over a month behind us. Cleanup is moving along, slowly. New Orleans is getting back to normal, but there is still a lot to do. So much, it seems, that FEMA isn’t able to find enough workers to keep up with the demands of the job.
Enter: Mexican immigrants. Hundreds of Mexican workers have arrived to New Orleans to do the job that no one else can do or wants to do. This is nothing new. Hard labor is no fun, and few us of would sign up for this kind of a job. We aren’t signing up. In the meantime, Mexicans are picking up the slack, and the Mayor of New Orleans screams “invasion”:
The new norm for New Orleans in terms of demographics is what concerns some city officials. Earlier this month, both Nagin and City Council President Oliver Thomas weighed in on the topic. Nagin was widely quoted as asking local business people, “How do I ensure that New Orleans is not overrun by Mexican workers?” But the mayor later sought to distance himself from that remark. His comments were focused on the question of whether Louisiana companies were getting their fair share, Nagin said.
“Overrun by Mexican workers”. Words that evoke images of chaos. Words charged with racism. Ironic.
Workers, Mexican or not, will be responsible for restoring New Orleans and giving Mayor Nagin (who, incidentally, won’t have to worry too much about the invasion, since he’s purchased a home in Dallas) back his once non-Mexican city. But for those who’d rather not hear Spanish in the streets or see brown faces on their block, life just isn’t that simple. After the reconstruction of the city is behind us, Latino workers will be in New Orleans. They will be in Mississippi and in Georgia. They will be everywhere because their labor is what is behind that glass of Chardonnay you are sipping and that faux French meal you’ll be sitting down to later tonight. Like it or not, Latinos are here to stay.
Via / Nola.com and Hispanic Tips
8:48 am By Maegan La Mala · Activism|Politics · Comments Off
19 Sep 2005
Just in case people think the situation is getting better and doesn’t need to be thought aboutin the Gulf Region in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and the human disaster that followed, Latina activist and reporter Rosa Clemente tells us what is up. In a report aired on Pacifica Radio’s Democracy Now!, Rosa compares the conditions in the shelters and the way people of color, including herself, are being treated, as “prison like”. You can read and listen to her report on the Democracy Now! website.
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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