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Immigrant Money Transfers Expected To Reach $150 Billion This Year
Salt Lake Tribune ^ | 12/26/2004 | Rhina Guidos

Posted on 12/26/2004 4:24:56 PM PST by Excuse_My_Bellicosity

SAN DIONISIO, Mexico - In this rural village, there is no industry, no paved roads, not even signs to tell visitors where it begins and ends.

There are big houses, though, that wouldn't look out of place in West Valley City. Electricity, too, and indoor plumbing. And cell phones, even in the humblest of adobe-and-brick homes.

But for Isidora Zaragosa, 62, all that progress cannot fill the void left by the young, sun-kissed men and women, including her children, who abandoned San Dionisio long ago. Like thousands of other Mexicans, most of them immigrated to the United States - particularly to Utah - leaving behind the broken hearts of their mothers, their children, their husbands and wives.

Those good men and women left, Zaragosa said, not because they wanted to but because they had to.

They couldn't earn enough money shucking corn and hauling alfalfa in this village of 1,600 to pay for their children's school uniforms, for immunizations, for meat to accompany the scant servings of nopal and maguey cactus the townspeople typically eat.

Now, the lucky ones in San Dionisio eat well, in lighted, warmer rooms, all courtesy of the money that family members earn by cleaning hotel rooms, washing dishes in restaurants, building highways, university halls and even Mormon temples in a place called Utah.

"Everyone here knows about Salt Lake City," said Aniseto Pérez Hern!ndez, a San Dionisio town council delegate.

"If there's five people in California from San Dionisio, I'd be surprised. Everyone [who migrates to the United States] goes to Utah."

Worldwide, some 80 million people, like the residents of San Dionisio, work abroad to support their families. Economists call the cross-border monetary transfers they make "remittances." On a global level, remittances are expected to reach the $150 billion mark by the end of the year.

What San Dionisio's residents are doing isn't unusual.

But because they base the bulk of their economic growth on money they receive from a single source - Utah jobs - their story is anything but ordinary. "Always been heartbreaking": Sitting on the edge of her bed, Isidora Zaragosa recalled all those nights she spent in this room crying and praying to God to please protect her children. One by one, her five sons and two of her five daughters told her they were going to a far away place that at first she couldn't even pronounce: "Yoo-tah."

She'd heard the name before. It had been mentioned by the families of those who had children "on the other side."

Whenever someone left San Dionisio that meant they were heading to Salt Lake City, nowhere else.

"I couldn't stop them," Zaragosa said.

She'd endured a similar loss decades ago, when her husband Inés headed north on a guest worker program to the United States for braceros, the thousands of Mexican laborers who toiled in agriculture or on the railroads while American men fought in World War II.

But when her children left, the void was far deeper.

"It's always been heartbreaking to watch them go," she said.

She knew, however, that she was no different than many of the families of this highland village 62 miles north of Mexico City.

For years, no one knows how long, men and women had been leaving, but always remembering to send a few dollars home to help their parents buy corn for tortillas - and maybe a few farm animals.

Today, the money flowing southward buys far more than tortillas, and San Dionisio bears the mark of a modern city 1,500 miles away.

An old woman walks down the street wearing a purple Utah Jazz cap. A mother shows off a photo of her daughter posing next to a Mormon pioneer handcart and points to a wall laden with coffee mugs of Salt Lake City hotels where her children have worked. Cars and trucks with "Ski Utah" license plates are parked in garages around town.

Zaragosa's son, Francisco, 41, speaks of building parts of Bangerter Highway and the LDS temple in Bountiful in the early 1990s.

The money he saved from those jobs was enough to buy about 8 1/2 acres next to his mother's property. That's where he's building his dream home, although it's nothing fancy like his brother's two-story house, a replica of the Utah homes they helped build.

The town would have survived without remittances, Francisco said.

"We would still be here, but we wouldn't look like this," he said, gesturing at the four- and five-bedroom homes along the skyline.

Back when Francisco was a boy, he watched families struggle to build even rudimentary adobe homes. Some men like his father went to labor in the United States through a guest worker program. Like all braceros, his father Inés was encouraged to put money into a savings program sponsored by banks in the United States and Mexico.

But when the war ended and the workers were no longer needed, the U.S. government sent the men home. When they tried to retrieve their savings, the money had disappeared.

Network of friends: That was San Dionisio's first brush with immigration and remittances, said Alfonso Hern!ndez, who at 95 is the town's oldest resident and de facto historian.

Today's tales of remittances to Mexico are much different and more complex.

Those who work in the United States have little trust in banks or the government, and they send remittances directly to families through Western Union or small money-transfer services. Their work and money pads Mexico's towns and cities with almost $10 billion and contributes to an estimated $450 billion that immigrants inject into the U.S. economy, according to the Inter-American Development Bank.

Unlike the braceros of the 1940s and 60s, however, today's itinerant workers are not escorted through the country, documented, hosed down and assigned a job.

Though some San Dionisians are legal U.S. residents or naturalized citizens, those who cannot obtain legal documents to work abroad seek the services of a pollero or coyote to smuggle them into the United States and eventually Utah.

Once they reach Salt Lake City, a network of friends helps them find jobs. In many cases, the townsfolk say, Utah employers place a call to San Dionisio, seek out former or new workers and offer them jobs, even though they know some don't have the documents needed to work.

Those San Dionisians who haven't been north are tempted to make the trip because they see first-hand what awaits the families of those residents who do leave.

There haven't been any San Dionisian deaths along the border yet, "thanks to the grace of God," Zaragosa said.

But the human stakes are growing as an increasing number of women, including Zaragosa's daughter-in-law, leave their children behind to join the U.S. work force.

This trend upsets old-timers - like Socorro Avila Morales, who worries that San Dionisians will forget that family togetherness is more important than money.

"It's just not correct [behavior]," she said.

"The poor children. It's not their fault and it affects them."

Nieves Pérez, a shy 15-year-old girl from San Dionisio, lived for several years without her parents along with six other siblings in the care of her grandmother.

She said it's nice to get presents from abroad. But it's painful to hear the distant voice of a mother and father on the telephone, and in her case, the cries of an American-born sibling she had never met.

But, she said, her parents are good people who just want to give her and her eight siblings "a good life."

When asked if the good life is worth living apart as a family, she shrugged and softly replied, "Who knows?"

That ambivalence is rarely seen in the adults of San Dionisio, who commute to Salt Lake City every few years and make plans about what they will do in the future with the money from abroad.

Isidora Zaragosa says she doesn't want to guess what San Dionisio will look like in five or 10 years if remittances keep coming at their current pace.

They already have changed the landscape, the architecture and even the people.

The young folks these days talk about finishing secondary school and immediately heading north, she said.

For Zaragosa, the only thing that matters is to have her sons and daughters and grandchildren nearby. Remittances may play a part in that, she believes, because eventually her sons will come home to live in the houses they have built.

"Some day, they're going to feel old, they're going to feel alone, and they're going to want to return home," Zaragosa said.

Her son Francisco tries to lighten her sentiments with a story:

On Valentine's Day, which in Mexico signifies friendship more than romantic love, the people decorate the town with the flags of the United States and Mexico, he said.

It is a symbol of the well-deserved appreciation San Dionisio owes its northern neighbor.

"We are very grateful to the United States," Francisco said.

"Without the U.S., we wouldn't have anything here. It's good to feel proud and to be grateful to say, 'Because of that country, I was able to do something here.' I hope this will help my children someday to focus on trying to get ahead, to see what we have done and to follow our example."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; Mexico; News/Current Events; US: Utah
KEYWORDS: aliens; immigrantlist; mexicomoney; remittance; trade
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To: TheDon

Illegal immigrants in California alone cost taxpayers nearly 9 billion every year in education, medical care and incarceration expenses.


21 posted on 12/26/2004 6:23:16 PM PST by Lijahsbubbe
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To: Lijahsbubbe

My office building is currently being rennovated and most of the workers appear to be recently arrived Mexicans. In the past, this work would have been done by unionized contractors. I often wonder why the unions don't make a bigger stink about this. The "too few workers" hypothesis would explain it, but methinks there is something more sinister going on. Specifically, I wonder if the unions have been told to pipe down about this by the Democratic masters.


22 posted on 12/26/2004 6:41:31 PM PST by rbg81
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To: Lijahsbubbe

Yep, and the voters have spoken on that issue. They don't want to pay that money! But they still want to have the Mexicans working for them, illegal or not.


23 posted on 12/26/2004 6:55:33 PM PST by TheDon (The Democratic Party is the party of TREASON)
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To: Lijahsbubbe
I'd rather have an American do the job of building my roads and buildings, not an illegal.

"I'd rather have union labor repair my highways" = "I'd rather pay higher taxes".

24 posted on 12/26/2004 6:55:37 PM PST by SedVictaCatoni (<><)
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To: SedVictaCatoni
"I'd rather have union labor repair my highways" = "I'd rather pay higher taxes".

Wrong. The cost to taxpayers for illegals AND their families is way more than the cost of an American worker. And American workers spend their money HERE.

25 posted on 12/26/2004 7:17:56 PM PST by Lijahsbubbe
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To: Excuse_My_Bellicosity
I hope the Mormon "church" is making sure all contracters are legal to work in this country. As a non-profit you have a huge burden to make sure you are hiring legal workers.
26 posted on 12/26/2004 7:20:28 PM PST by ThisLittleLightofMine
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To: rbg81
I often wonder about this too. I have no problem with legal immigrants wanting to come and make a better live for themselves and their families. Quite frankly many industries take advantage of these workers, seriously would anyone else work for $7.00 an hour as hard as they work?? Why aren't the unions all over these immigrants to forge a new Latino union?? Something has to be up with the union bosses.
27 posted on 12/26/2004 7:25:50 PM PST by ThisLittleLightofMine
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To: ccmay
The bigger problem by far is in health care, where illegal aliens are an intolerable burden on the public purse.

They are the reason why hundreds of emergency rooms and hospitals have closed. They are the reason your insurance premiums are so high. They are the reason your drugs cost $50 rather than $10.

It's not that the ones who work here are so sick, although that is a contributing factor. If there is someone back home who is very sick they frequently arrange a 'vacation' for that person to visit a relative in the US. That person shows up at the hospital and is not turned away. You and I are all paying for it. Multiple organ transplants, dialysis, you name it. We're all paying for it.

28 posted on 12/26/2004 7:34:28 PM PST by ladyjane
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To: Excuse_My_Bellicosity

"Immigrant Money Transfers Expected To Reach $150 Billion This Year"


That's $150,000,000,000 that used to circulate in the US economy via American worker's pockets. It created jobs for Americans and didn't cost the taxpayer one red cent.


29 posted on 12/26/2004 7:42:40 PM PST by ETERNAL WARMING
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To: 1_Inch_Group; 2sheep; 2Trievers; 3AngelaD; 4.1O dana super trac pak; 4Freedom; 4ourprogeny; ...

ping


30 posted on 12/26/2004 7:43:48 PM PST by gubamyster
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To: ladyjane

"They are the reason why hundreds of emergency rooms and hospitals have closed. They are the reason your insurance premiums are so high. They are the reason your drugs cost $50 rather than $10."

They are the reason we have to build 12 new schools in Las Vegas. They are the reason my property taxes rose by $1000 in one year. They are the reason my monthly expenses have risen $240 per month in hidden taxes and subsidies thanks to an $833,000,000 tax increase levied on the AMERICAN CITIZENS of Nevada.


31 posted on 12/26/2004 7:48:15 PM PST by ETERNAL WARMING
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To: Nick Danger
Sounds to me like they're passionate. Exactly the kind of people I'd like to hire.
32 posted on 12/26/2004 9:35:06 PM PST by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: Nick Danger
Here are guys who will walk 1200 miles to get to a place where they can make some money, and when they do they send it home

Hey Nick, weren't you the one that suggested we need 60 *million* more illegal aliens to keep our economy going?

33 posted on 12/26/2004 11:38:34 PM PST by Joe Hadenuf
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To: ETERNAL WARMING
They are the reason we have to build 12 new schools in Las Vegas. They are the reason my property taxes rose by $1000 in one year. They are the reason my monthly expenses have risen $240 per month in hidden taxes and subsidies thanks to an $833,000,000 tax increase levied on the AMERICAN CITIZENS of Nevada.

It's going the same way everywhere, not just Nevada but Cal, Arizona, Colorado, Washington, Oregon, Tennessee, Indiana, Ohio, Georgia, Idaho, North and south Carolina, North Dakota, NY, Texas, Florida etc etc.

34 posted on 12/26/2004 11:44:37 PM PST by Joe Hadenuf
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To: Joe Hadenuf

No, I'm the guy who said we need 60 million more people to avoid a crushing workers-per-retiree ratio. We can't have every 2 people supporting a retiree. But that's where we're headed unless we get some more people in here.


35 posted on 12/26/2004 11:59:47 PM PST by Nick Danger (Want some wood?)
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To: Nick Danger
Here are guys who will walk 1200 miles to get to a place where they can make some money, and when they do they send it home to their mothers, wives, and children.

God forbid anybody like that should enter our country.

God forbid anymore of them entering our country:

ALIPAC Exclusive: More illegal aliens charged with kidnapping & gang rape

More gang members showing up in border seizures

36 posted on 12/27/2004 12:06:41 AM PST by gubamyster
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To: gubamyster

Yeah, we don't have any criminals in our population, and they have nothing but criminals in theirs. Everybody knows that, right?


37 posted on 12/27/2004 12:14:50 AM PST by Nick Danger (Want some wood?)
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To: Nick Danger

Su visión y futuro para América es dispicable. La clase inferior que es presente pudo hacer le la sensación mejor, hace una cierta investigación como parada el coolaid.


38 posted on 12/27/2004 7:58:16 AM PST by Afronaut (Press two for English.)
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To: Afronaut

No comprende.


39 posted on 12/27/2004 4:48:47 PM PST by Nick Danger (Want some wood?)
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To: Nick Danger
Big BUMP.
40 posted on 12/29/2004 10:14:41 PM PST by maui_hawaii
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