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Letter to the Editor Re: Immigration Sparks Fears of New Appalachia

Cite as "AILA InfoNet Doc. No. 38me1004 (posted Jan. 12, 2001)"

January 12, 2001

Letters to the Editor
The Arizona Republic
200 East Van Buren
Phoenix, AZ 85001

To The Editor:

Judging by his recent column ("Immigration sparks fears of new Appalachia," January 8), Jon Kamman looks at a Picasso and only sees a distorted perspective, not the wonderful art. Like the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS), Mr. Kamman cannot accept good news about immigrants.

The good news, which went unreported in the article, is that the immigrants who entered the U.S. during the 1990s are helping sustain out economic boom. These same immigrants also are improving the viability of Social Security and Medicare, and are learning English sooner, getting educated quicker and buying homes at a faster rate than other waves of immigrants.

There is no disputing the fact that, in terms of raw numbers, the 1990s saw the largest influx of immigrants in history. However, immigrants still make up a lower percentage of the population than they did 100 years ago. The 1990s also saw the largest, most-sustained economic boom in American history, the lowest unemployment rate in nearly 40 years, and the lowest interest rates in nearly half-a-century. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and other economists say these newest immigrants are helping sustain our historic economic growth.

Immigrants also are helping to sustain the financial viability of our benefit systems. Kenneth Prewitt, the Census Director, recently noted that without the immigrants of the 1990s, the Social Security and Medicare systems would be suffering because the U.S. would have more retirees receiving benefits than younger people working and contributing to the systems.

The very same Census Bureau statistics cited by Mr. Kamman also show that recent immigrants are catching up educationally much more rapidly than even government demographers thought possible. Many immigrants, including Hispanics, have advanced and intermediate education. The data also show that the pace at which immigrants learn English is accelerating, and that approximately 67% of recent immigrants own homes. Many more are marrying U.S. citizens.

To those who allege that immigrants contribute to urban sprawl and population growth in the Southwest during the 1990s, the Census Bureau shows that immigrants settled in 10 major cities, seven of which actually lost population during the decade. The data also shows that a large number of U.S. citizens, 1.7 million, moved into the Arizona, New Mexico and Utah area from other states during that decade.

Recent immigrants are helping our economy and our taxpayer funded retirement systems. They are learning our language and customs faster than previous immigrants, are better educated than earlier immigrants, and are homeowners. But you would not know that from reading the CIS report or Mr. Kamman’s article, both of which ignore the positive contributions immigration and immigrants have made and will continue to make to our country.

Sincerely yours,



Lisa Duran

Ms. Duran, an attorney at Streich Lang, is President of the Arizona Chapter of the American Immigration Lawyers Association.

38me1004