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A letter from the President
Track II Diplomacy: Can "Unofficial" Talks Avert Disaster?
The National Library of South Africa
Nonprofit Journalism: Removing the Pressure of the Bottom Line
New Immigrants in New Places: America's Growing "Global Interior"
Career and Technology Education: It's Not Just "Vocational Education" Anymore
Recent Events
Foundation Roundup
The Back Page
Also in this issue:
A Conversation with Harold Saunders
The U.S. and North Korea: A Track II Meeting Brings Results
Immigration Legislation: Solutions for a Broken System
Book Reviews
Enterprising Journalism Interns Summer in the City
2005 Andrew Carnegie Medals of Philanthropy
High-bandwidth site
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#10: Spring 2005
#9: Fall 2004
#8: Spring 2004
#7: Fall 2003
#6: Spring 2003
#5: Fall 2002
#4: Spring 2002
#3: Fall 2001
#2: Spring 2001
#1: Summer 2000
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New Immigrants in New Places: America's Growing "Global Interior"
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While the answer is unclear, a city still struggling with
black and white racial issues is also learning how to cope with new strains
of diversity. Among the first group in Nashville to feel the convergence
of immigrants and refugees were local businessmen who were readily employing
the droves of newcomers arriving in the city looking for jobs.
During the 1990s, the metropolitan area added 260,000 jobs, mainly due
to the establishment of Nissan, Saturn and Dell manufacturing plants,
and employers were overjoyed to tap into the abundant supply of immigrants
and refugees--even if they didn't speak English--to work in factories,
on construction sites and in restaurants and stores. Nashville-based Gaylord
Entertainment, America's fastest-growing specialty lodging and entertainment
company, which has expanded its legendary Grand Ole Opry to include an
entertainment division and a chain of hotels and resorts, including the
2,884-room Opryland Hotel in Nashville, houses its foreign-born workers
at smaller, off-site hotels and provides English-as-a-Second Language
(ESL) classes. One large Nashville construction company reports that one-fourth
of its employees are Hispanic and a meatpacking plant near Nashville reports
that 40 percent of its 1,600 employees are from foreign countries and
speak 13 different languages.
"Employers were saying, 'I need workers even if they don't speak English,'"
says Garrett Harper, who was research director at the Nashville Chamber
of Commerce before joining the Visitors Bureau. "Employers welcomed the
foreign-born and whether the employers were good entities or exploiters,
they'd say that having this workforce was a good thing for Nashville.
There was the idea that everyone was a winner, and the foreign-born weren't
considered a great burden. Even if there wasn't always a welcoming, there
also wasn't anything negative." Some business leaders even suggested that
the economy and population growth would have faltered if not for the foreign-born
workers who took jobs unfilled by Americans.
But the immigrant workers also brought problems with them: poverty, illegal
status and language barriers all took their toll when these newcomers
arrived on Nashville's doorstep. Currently, eighteen percent of the foreign-born
population in Nashville lives below the federal poverty level ($17,050
for a family of four in 2000), almost double the rate for the total city
population. Almost half of the foreign-born population speaks limited
English. Three-fourths are not citizens and, therefore, are civically
isolated and politically disenfranchised. The public school superintendent,
a Cuban refugee, has increased the number of ESL classes for a student
body that speaks 80 different languages. But the increases cannot keep
pace with the demand, and the number of classes and teachers is woefully
lacking.
The police department began hiring Hispanic officers in the 1990s and
now offers an online course entitled "Intensive Survival Spanish for Law
Enforcement." But the course costs $120 and provides only limited skills,
and there are complaints that officers are often ineffective in working
with the foreign-born community because of language barriers. In 2000,
Hispanics staged a protest when two local policemen inadvertently gunned
down a Korean merchant who was attempting to foil a pair of armed robbers.
City leaders, especially businessmen, realized that the city was undergoing
major cultural, social and civic changes and called for help. Garrett
Harper was working at the Chamber of Commerce in 2000 when he became the
principal architect of a request to the U.S. Office of Refugee Resettlement
for a $375,000 grant to undertake a three-year pilot venture called "Building
the New American Community (BNAC) Initiative."
Nashville was one of three cities, including Lowell, Massachusetts and
Portland, Oregon chosen in 2001 to receive the grant and become an experimental
integration site. The initiative stemmed from the absence of a national
immigrant policy that might otherwise help governments and civil society
unaccustomed to the influx of newcomers to respond in a positive manner.
The BNAC Initiative is a joint project of five national organizations:
the National Conference of State Legislatures, the Urban Institute, the
National Immigration Forum, the Southeast Asia Resource Action Center
and the Migration Policy Institute. It was primarily funded by the U.S.
Office of Refugee Resettlement and received additional funding from the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Carnegie Corporation of New
York also provided support to the National Immigration Forum, the Migration
Policy Institute and the National Conference of State Legislatures for
their work on BNAC. Says Geri Mannion, chair of the Corporation's Strengthening
U.S. Democracy program, "It is important, in the Corporation's view, to
develop immigrant policies aimed at integrating newcomers into our national
life--not just immigration policies dealing with who can come here and
who can't, and in what numbers--because helping newcomers to become full
participants in our democracy will help us keep our nation vibrant and
strong."
Demetrios Papademetriou, president of the Migration Policy Institute in
Washington, D.C., says smaller cities like Nashville are discovering that
public-private partnerships are vital to integrating the increasing numbers
of immigrants.
Under BNAC, the Nashville New American Coalition (NNAC), an alliance of
businesses, social service agencies and immigrant and refugee activist
rights groups, was formed to integrate the foreign born into the political,
social and economic life of the city. NNAC, sponsored by the Nashville
Chamber of Commerce and sixteen organizations representing immigrants
and refugees, specifically identified the workplace as the key arena for
integration and focused on involving the entire community--not just immigrants
and refugees--in the integration process.
"Immigrant integration is not just a one-way process," says Ann Morse,
program director of the Immigrant Policy Project for the National Conference
of State Legislatures and BNAC program manager. "What this project proved
is that integration is a complex, multifaceted, long-term process that
involves an entire community including employers, schools, neighborhoods,
places of worship and government agencies. Nashville was unique because
of the commitment from the business community, but it reflects a national
trend. Most businesses recognize we're running out of workers."
NNAC worked in four areas: business development, citizen and civic participation,
research and leadership and capacity building. Nashville Metro Social
Services and the Tennessee Department of Human Resources was also involved
in the project. The organization's community-building efforts included
immigrant voter education, recertification for foreign-trained professionals,
leadership training and youth development. NNAC also provided technical
and management assistance to community immigrant and refugee organizations
such as Kurdish Human Rights Watch, the Somali Community Center of Nashville,
the Nashville Egyptian Community, the Sudanese Humanitarian Organization,
the International Lao-American Organization and Iraqi House. The city
now has two Hispanic Chambers of Commerce.
Next page: NNAC placed added emphasis
on reaching out to employers, who had little experience with immigrant
workers, to teach them about different social and cultural practices that
could affect the workplace.
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