Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Ricardo 3.

It is the Christmas season.  Half of my living room is filled with Xmas packages and the other half is full of belongings from Ricardo who has been sent to Mexico.  The mix seems strange to me; things are not right.   His step-daughter and I drove 150 miles to St. Louis last Thursday to send his 40 pound suitcase with him.  It cost us $6 to park near the immigration office ; we were warned that parking on the street would bring a St. Louis ticket which we didn’t need.  The ICE center was full of middle aged white men who were very polite to me.  We were shone to the luggage room but then told that they couldn’t accept the suitcase we had (it was one that had been used several times to fly on Air Mexico).  The government charter flight wouldn’t accept it.  Even though it weighed only 40 pounds, it was too big.  We gave money that Ricardo could use to get from the border to Mexico City.  We felt like our trip had been in vain.

We talked with Ricardo several days later. He was glad to be in Mexico and his parents were looking forward to his being with them for Xmas.  This was the tradeoff – they were supported for 10 years but son and parents never saw each other.  I wondered how they would live, but knew that now was not the time to ask.  Ricardo’s younger brother has just crossed the border; maybe it is time for him to support his parents.  Maybe Fed Ex will take some of Ricardo’s things

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Antonia

Antonia was brought to the United States by his mother when he was 13 years old.  Now he has been here for 10 years.  He enrolled in high school as a sophomore and graduated.  He earned a “B” in drivers education.  His time in high school included some rough spots and he received two DUIs as well as several other driving tickets.  He started dating Laura when he was 20 and his driving greatly improved.

The couple moved in together three years ago and are currently buying a trailer, furniture and a car.  They had baby Sophia one and a half years ago.  Laura dropped out of high school but is working on her GED.  Last September (2011) Antonia received a ticket for not stopping completely at a stop sign.  He was picked up by ICE and taken to a county jail in Missouri.  Laura was not working and was left with no income.  Fortunately they had saved enough money to pay bills for one month.  In October, she borrowed $5,000 for his bail money and drove to Missouri to return him home.  He had two jobs but lost them both with one months absence.  She took a night job at a fast food restaurant and he has obtained part-time work.  They have used all savings and are under great stress financially.  He has received a notice from ICE saying that he will have an immigration hearing in New Orleans in November of 2012.  They are unclear about what the outcome will be or how to obtain legal representation in New Orleans.  They are model parents and baby Sophia has the temperament and curly hair of little Shirley Temple.  She refuses to let him out of her sight and the only word she knows is da-da.  Laura has taken the GED exam but will not know the results until January.

Monday, December 5, 2011

Ricardo 2.


Someone left all of Ricardo’s possessions on my porch.  His step-daughter is staying with me.  I looked at the pile and thought that it was so ironic that a man came here with nothing across the border 10 years ago, worked two jobs most of the time and leaves with whatever we can pack in a 40 pound suitcase.  He sent money every month to his parents in Mexico and supported whatever household he was in here.  Who will support him and what will his life be like in Mexico?  I called immigration in St. Louis.  They said that we need to bring his 40 pound bag to their office by Friday.  We can’t mail anything.  Who will make the 200 mile trip?  He had wanted to sign a voluntary return paper but I was told that he couldn’t sign one unless he sees a judge again which would not be possible until next April.  He has already stayed in jail for 3 months and is willing to sign a paper granting him voluntary deportation.  His family has to send extra money since he saw a doctor while in the county jail and has to pay for that.  Immigration will take him to the border but he has to pay to travel to Mexico City.  I feel great anger at his treatment and wonder why the taxpayer had to pay for his three months in jail.  None of this makes the community more secure.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Thoughts


From our community it seems that the people taken by ICE Secure Communities are identified by traffic violations.  I know of no-one who has committed a felony.  If the state had a drivers certificate program for undocumented people then there would be no-one for ICE to take.  Such a program would save the federal government the cost of detaining residents in county jails and immigration detention centers.  Local counties would save the cost of keeping people until ICE picked them up and would collect more traffic related fees.  When immigration takes people away from jobs, then local court related fees are not paid and families are without income.  In a community where non-citizens have lived at least 10 years, the line between legal and illegal residents is blurred and the whole community becomes insecure by the Secure Communities program.

Friday, November 25, 2011

Francisca


About seven years ago Francisca was married to a man who often did illegal things.  I don’t know the exact circumstances but they both were deported from the country.  Francisca was not successful in getting a job in Mexico and arranged to return to the US as a single person about five years ago.  She successfully worked at a fast food place and had no legal difficulties for five years when she was stopped for a traffic violation.  Because she was once deported she was to immediately be deported again.  She was in an immigration detention center for three weeks and was then deported.  Francisca was the only person in her family who had a land-line telephone and that was cut off so she was not able to communicate with anyone about where she was and how she was doing.  She has many health problems including diabetes and had no medication while in detention.  Her boyfriend is an American and he has decided to follow her to Mexico and marry her.  It used to be that marrying an American provided a path to citizenship but today marrying someone who is in the country illegally brings many immigration problems.  This is true love that has not yet found a home country.

Jose

Nov. 3,  2011
Jose
Every country has its young adults who interrupt their lives to take a trip abroad.  This was true of Jose a member of a middle class Mexican family who after one year at the university decided to take some time in the United States.  He came by visa which later expired and stayed with an uncle.  He was an extroverted young man who was very pleasant and looked much like other youth his age world-wide.  He constantly carried a very expensive computer which he used with great expertise.  He spent weekends partying with other young men  who shared his need for adventure but not his social background.

Jose fell in love with Lucia, a very introverted young woman, with a troubled background but much common sense.  Lucia was ambivalent about him and finally decided that his lifestyle did not fit hers.  She rejected him and he responded with heavy drinking.  He received a DUI and was sent to the local jail.  ICE was notified and he has spent two months in an immigration detention center.   He has signed the voluntary order to return to Mexico.  He painted houses for a local contractor for $9 per hour and was considered an excellent employee.  I hope that they have hired an American citizen to take his place.  The local community may be safer without him but it is not as interesting.  The world would have been safer if ICE would have spent money on alcohol counseling for him rather than pay board and room for two months.  His family is very happy that he is coming home. 

Ricardo


Ricardo has been in the United States for over 10 years.  He has always sent money to Mexico to support family members.  His outstanding characteristic has been his dedication toward work.  He has always had one or two jobs in restaurants.  In the process he learned to cook and was the main cook at a local restaurant until he was taken by the Secure Community Program .  He is hard working and has always gotten along well with fellow workers who trust him in every way.

Eight years ago he established a long term relationship with Marie.  She was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and had much anxiety.  She twice called and police and filed domestic violence charges.  Ricardo completed counseling and a 28 week course in domestic violence which the court ordered.  Later this relationship became more stable and the couple now have a four old child, Carla.  In the last two years the relationship has ended although they still communicate about Carla.

Ricardo has always contributed financially to whatever house he was in.  He supported the household of Marie which also included two older daughters.  His child and her mother are presently in Mexico caring for her ill mother.  He has always sent money for their support until he was seized by ICE.  There was a plan to bring Carla to the United States, however, that plan has been postponed.  Presently she is unable to attend public pre-school in Mexico because she is an American citizen.

Ricardo had a traffic violation which caused him to be picked by ICE.  He has been in a county jail in Missouri for three months.  He is unable to pay the bond and his immigration hearing is next week.  He has decided to voluntarily return to Mexico although it is not clear when that will happen.  Ricardo has been unable to find a low cost lawyer since immigration sent him to Missouri and legal agencies do not represent non-Missouri residents.

Julia

I first met Julia in July of 2001 ; she was 16 and had just come from Mexico.  I asked her why she had come here from Mexico.  She said through a translator that she wanted to attend high school.  Administrators from the local high school told her that the ESL program was not developed enough to provide services to someone who didn’t speak any English.  She needed to learn English first.  She has been enrolled in community English classes much of the time since then.  She has also been employed in the community.  She has often done heavy work such as cleaning houses.  Her main problem here has been with driving.  She often has had tasks that have required her to drive but she has never had the opportunity to take a drivers education class.  She lives in a state that prohibits non-citizens from taking drivers exams or obtaining legal licenses.  I know of no other legal problems that she has had in the community.
She has taught herself to use a computer and is my friend on Facebook.  Her oldest son , Ethan, is an introvert who very much feels the experiences that his mother has had with ICE.  Her youngest son, Christopher, is an extrovert who needs gentle but firm boundaries from his mother.  Both boys are citizens who will contribute to this country.  Julia spent 10 days in an immigration detention center but is home now and awaits an immigration hearing.

History of Secure Communities.

I have become very close to the immigrant community in our town during the last 10 years and have many friends there.  In September of 2011, six of my friends disappeared.  They all had minor, mostly traffic  violations.  They fell prey to the “secure communities” program  which was established by ICE under a 2008 law which  gives them authority to remove those who are in the country illegally and violated local laws.  Their literature says that they deport felons, however,  many convicted of minor laws have been deported.  Members of the Obama administration  will say that the hope is that strict deportation laws will convince conservatives that we need immigration reform, however,  the political climate is now such that no immigration reform is possible under any circumstances.  My more cynical friends say that the system supports the 250 new detention centers that have been built by private companies to hold immigrants in the legal process.  In our smaller community most immigrant families have been here 10 years or more and are part of our community lives.  Most have citizen children who attend our schools,  churches, scout troops, sports camps and other activities.  The line between legal and illegal citizens is very blurred and it is a shock when the government has the right to take residents away without notice or exploration.  I feel like I am in a police state and even greater fear is generated in the immigrant community.  We are all part of an “insecure community”.

The following blog contains information about my six disappeared friends.  All six face deportation hearings and I will report results as they happen.  Three have been returned to the community without bond.  One has paid a $5,000 bond and is at home until his hearing.  Two have $7,000 bonds and remain in custody in detention centers in the region.