Around half of Kennett Square, Pennsylvania residents are from Mexico and they've contributed significantly to the economy and vibrancy of this community. Anti-immigrant conservative America is shooting America in the foot with its exclusionary policies and practices.
Thanks to Dr. Aida Hurtado for sharing.
-Angela
The Mexican Revival of Small-Town America
By Alfredo Corchado |
The New York Times Opinion Section
The New York Times Opinion Section
Mr. Corchado is the Mexico border correspondent for The Dallas Morning News.
KENNETT SQUARE,
Pa. — Amid all the anti-immigrant fervor, nativists have overlooked a
fundamental fact: In recent years, Mexican immigrants and their
Mexican-American offspring have been rescuing the most iconic places in
America — its small towns.
In the past 10 years, the number of Mexican immigrants living in the United States has declined by more than one million;
some left by choice but tens of thousands more left through
deportation. Americans who dream of an America without Mexicans should
consider Kennett Square.
A town of
more than 6,000 people, about an hour outside Philadelphia, Kennett
Square proudly calls itself the mushroom capital of the world. The $2.7 billion mushroom industry in southeastern Pennsylvania employs 10,000 people. On New Year’s Eve, Kennett Square drops a bright mushroom cap. These days the festivities are overshadowed by fear.
“Mexicans
are leaving, and that’s bad news for everyone,” Chris Alonzo, president
of Pietro Industries, one of the biggest mushroom companies, and a
third-generation mushroom farmer, told me. “All the negativity, the
fearmongering, the anti-immigrant feeling is hurting our small town.
We’re seeing labor shortages, and that threatens the vibrancy of our
community.”
Kennett Square isn’t an anomaly. Across
the country, cities of all sizes are coping with the loss of immigrant
labor, but the impact is felt strongest in small-town America. From the
meatpacking plants of Lincoln, Neb., to the service industry in Lake
Geneva, Wis., immigrants and their employers are increasingly nervous.
It may get worse if the trend continues. The birthrate in the United
States has dropped to a 30-year low. Rumors of the presence of
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents force immigrants to plan for
the worst.
In Lake Geneva, I heard a
longtime gardener talking to his family of four, half of them living
without proper work documents. Should he and his wife be deported, he
told their children, they must continue the family landscaping business.
If not, their livelihood was at stake.
Overall, immigrants have helped both
wealthy and poorer rural towns cope with an aging, declining population.
They’ve rescued abandoned communities, some that had been losing
population since the 1920s. Immigrants make up 13 percent of the
national population and 16 percent of the labor force, but they
constitute 18 percent of small-business owners, according to one of the most comprehensive reports on the subject,
which was done by the Fiscal Policy Institute’s Immigration Research
Initiative. Nationally, immigrant-owned small businesses employ 4.7
million people and, according to the report, generate $776 billion in
receipts.
In the Midwest, immigrant
renewal includes neighborhoods overrun by heroin and meth addiction.
These same illegal drugs fuel violence in the hometowns of these
immigrants back in Mexico.
Trouble
back home resonates here in Kennett Square. When I discovered the quaint
town by chance on an early wintry evening in the 1980s, the men were
just lonely workers, coming mostly from the central Mexican state of
Guanajuato. I was a reporter for The Wall Street Journal looking for a
story.
Then and now,
the most compelling sight in the town was its white steeple church. The
town was part of the land owned by William Penn, the Quaker who also
founded Pennsylvania. In the background, the music from Los Bukis, a
Mexican band, played, as we gathered outside one of the shacks, next to a
fire, waiting for grilled cabrito (goat), tortillas and jalapeƱos. I
was appalled by their poor living conditions — rundown trailers and
outhouses tucked into the landscape, as if they weren’t part of the
town.
The men talked about leaving.
They didn’t integrate, much less assimilate. Most were desperate to
reunite with their families back home. Thanks to President Ronald
Reagan’s landmark Immigration Reform and Control Act, though, an
estimated 2.7 million people were legalized beginning in 1986, enabling
Mexicans and other immigrants to roam freely in greater numbers in
search of opportunities.
In Kennett
Square, instead of leaving as they had originally hoped, the men saw the
value in an industry that provided year-round work. In rural America
they saw the ideal place to raise a family. Today, about half of Kennett Square’s residents are Hispanic, of whom an estimated 80 percent are Mexican, according to La Comunidad Hispana, which provides medical, educational and legal services for immigrants.
For
more than three generations, the newcomers have contributed to the
renewal of Kennett Square. Some Mexican immigrants have started their
own mushroom farms. Some own hair salons. Others own Mexican grocery
stores. There’s even a taco war, as locals debate who makes the best
tacos: Are they downtown or in nearby Avondale? Hundreds of children are
now high school graduates, and many went on to earn college degrees.
“The Mexicans changed the community for the better,” Loretta Perna, program coordinator of the Walk in Knowledge Program
at Kennett High School, told me. “They became part of not just the
mushroom community but part of the overall community, bringing color,
richness to an otherwise bland life.”
One
of Ms. Perna’s students is Sofia Soto, 18, daughter of Jaime Aguilera, a
veteran mushroom worker who built his own landscaping business. Mr.
Aguilera now sits in a detention center, waiting for an immigration
judge to decide his fate, that of his family and in a more general
sense, the future of his adopted hometown. Ms. Soto, like her two
siblings and her mother, is an American. She’s determined to attend West
Chester University this fall, a promise she made to her father. But she
said: “If he’s deported, it won’t be easy. He’s my inspiration.”
Such
stories worry Mr. Alonzo, the mushroom grower. Workers aren’t applying
for jobs. In fact, many of them avoid walking or driving in town, afraid
of giving authorities any reason to check their documents.
Surprisingly,
on my most recent visit, some of the newcomers were Central American.
At first glance, the immigrant story seemed to be repeating itself. But
with the climate of fear, Mr. Alonzo isn’t so sure. “If this continues,”
he told me, “the vibrancy of this small, rural community will be gone.”
Alfredo Corchado (@ajcorchado)
is the Mexico-border correspondent for The Dallas Morning News and the
author, most recently, of “Homelands: Four Friends, Two Countries, and
the Fate of the Great Mexican-American Migration.”
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A version of this article appears in print on , on Page SR2 of the New York edition with the headline: The Mexican Revival of Small-Town America. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
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