Published December 07, 2008 12:08 pm -
Moving out?
Failing economy sends many Hispanics out of town
Charles Oliver
Dalton Daily Citizen
Father Jesus David Trujillo Luna says he has seen “too many” of his Hispanic parishioners leaving Dalton’s St. Joseph’s Catholic Church this year.
“I’ve had more than 50 families ask me for a blessing before they left,” he said. “These are families that have been here 15, 20 years. Their children were born here and raised here.”
Why are so many people leaving?
Trujillo says the recession and layoffs in the carpet industry have forced them to look elsewhere for work.
“They tell me there’s no work here. They’ve been looking for a couple of months and can’t find a job,” he said.
Aaron Moore, president of Dalton’s Latin American Community Alliance, says he wouldn’t call it a mass exodus of Hispanics.
“But it’s certainly what you might call an arterial bleed,” he said. “Many of our Hispanic families like many of our other low-income families live paycheck to paycheck, and as soon as that paycheck isn’t coming in on a regular basis, as soon as there are just a few weeks of unemployment, then they have to start looking for something to replace it.”
Where are they going? Trujillo says two destinations stand out: California and Mexico.
“Some of them have told me they are going back to California. One of the reasons is that the have family there,” he said.
Many of them have gone back to Mexico, and Trujillo says many of the children, especially the older children are not happy about that move.
“Mexico is a foreign country to them. Some of them don’t speak Spanish that well,” he said. “I know of one girl whose family moved back to Mexico. She had been in this country 16 years. Her Spanish is very weak. She basically speaks English.”
Trujillo says those children have moved with their families, but he says some of them have told him they planned to come back as soon as they could.
“This is their home,” he said.
Moore says he doesn’t believe that most of those who have left the area have gone to other countries.
“Most of the stories I here are that they are returning to the more migratory work that they may have had previous to coming here and that they are mostly looking within the United States,” he said. “They already know that the economy being as poor as it is in their home country they are not likely to find anything in their home country. That’s why they came here. Probably eight or nine out of every 10 I here of leaving this area are planning on moving to other parts of the United States.”