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Welcome—Delegate D. Page Elmore Words from the Task Force Chairman—Geoffrey S. Tobias

Eastern Shore Meeting of the Task Force to Study Driver Licensing Documentation Agenda June 28, 2004. Welcome—Delegate D. Page Elmore Words from the Task Force Chairman—Geoffrey S. Tobias Bienvenidos Overview—Amy K. Liebman Eastern Shore Needs Assessment—Tim Dunn Invited Testimony.

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Welcome—Delegate D. Page Elmore Words from the Task Force Chairman—Geoffrey S. Tobias

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  1. Eastern Shore Meeting of the Task Force to Study Driver Licensing DocumentationAgendaJune 28, 2004 • Welcome—Delegate D. Page Elmore • Words from the Task Force Chairman—Geoffrey S. Tobias • Bienvenidos Overview—Amy K. Liebman • Eastern Shore Needs Assessment—Tim Dunn • Invited Testimony

  2. Changing Face of Delmarva Tim Dunn, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Sociology Amy K. Liebman, MPA BEACON Consultant Salisbury University June 28, 2004

  3. Hispanic Population Growth on 8 Eastern Shore Counties 1990-2000 Source: US Census 1990, 2000

  4. Hispanic Immigrants on Delmarva

  5. BIENVENIDOS A DELMARVA • Network of over 70 service providing organizations on the Delmarva Peninsula preparing to meet the needs of our immigrant communities • Housed at BEACON of Salisbury University—http://beacon.salisbury.edu/

  6. Activities • Meet Monthly to • Exchange Information • Discuss Problems and Needs • Work on Solutions • Raise Awareness • Conduct Outreach • Conduct Research • Facilitate Training • Cultural Competency

  7. Needs Assessment • Assessed the needs and service gaps among Hispanic immigrants on Maryland’s Eastern Shore to to improve the provision of services to this population and to reduce barriers to these services • Funded by Eastern Shore Regional Library • Conducted by BEACON, Salisbury University and Horizon Marketing

  8. Methodology • Survey (Ethno)—185 Participants, snowball/network referral sample • Wicomico, Somerset, Caroline, Worcester • 11 Focus Groups • 8 with immigrants (50 participants) • Wicomico County (2) • Somerset • Kent/Queen Anne’s County • Caroline • Talbot • Worcester • Dorchester • 3 with service providers (40 participants) • 275 participants total

  9. Country of Origin New Geography of Mexican Migration Starting in 1990’s New Receiving Communities

  10. Time on Delmarva Median = 2 years

  11. Age • Very Young • Median Age = 29 Years Old

  12. Gender and Marital Status • 66.5% Male -- 33.5% Female • 41% Single • 39% Married • 20% Living Together • Less than 1% Divorced

  13. Years of Education • Median = 6 years • Mexicans (median 6 years) slightly more education the Guatemalans (median 4 years)

  14. Occupation in Sending Country Agriculture—Peasants, Farmworkers Services—Domestic, Restaurant, Hotel, Retail Sales

  15. Occupation in US • 80% of unemployed are female, nearly all taking care of children • Services = Restaurant, Hotel, Domestic, Maintenance

  16. Labor Force Participation

  17. Labor Demand • US—Immigrants accounted for ALL workforce growth under 35 years of age. • US—1/3 of unskilled workforce are immigrants. • Maryland—New immigrants accounted for 76% of labor force growth from 1990-2000, • Vs. 50% nationally

  18. Earnings • Average wage is $7.25-$7.75/hour • Average work week is 40 hours • Median amount of $ sent home = $300-$349 (1/3 send +$500) Maryland’s Latino immigrants have highest level of remittances of any state in the US • Median Savings/Month = $175-$199

  19. Come to the US for Economic Reasons • To have work—40% • For a better life—34% • To save money—17% • Family here – 6% • Other—3%

  20. Migration Experience • 58%--Delmarva First Migration Experience • 77%--First trip taken to the US NEW IMMIGRANTS Social networks new GROWTH & Self perpetuating migration

  21. Documentation • 84% Unauthorized Immigrants • 2/3 have taxes withheld from pay • Nationally from 1990-1998, unauthorized immigrants paid $20 billion in social security taxes alone • Very limited access to legal entry • Strong labor demand • 27% have Consulate Issued ID Cards (Matricula Consular) • Most lack information or opportunity to get card

  22. US Citizen Children • Mixed Status Households • 9-11 million undocumented residents • 3 million US citizen children

  23. Future Plans • Plan to be in same town/city in 3 years • 57% plan to remain • Unusually high • Return to country of origin in 3 years • 42% plan to move back Plan to Stay

  24. Most Difficult Things about Life in US

  25. Desired Services for Better Life

  26. Desired Library Services

  27. LanguageOver 90% do not understand English or have only limited understanding

  28. Desire to Learn English • “If it were possible to gain a command of the English language to understand legal immigration issues, and be in good health—that would be great.” • “To get better jobs you always need the language [English].” • Noted language as barrier to accessing health services.

  29. Language • Typical learning cycle for non-English speaking immigrants in the US is 3 generations • 1st generation learns enough to get by • 2nd generation is bilingual • 3rd generation monolingual English

  30. TransportationFocus group participants noted: • lack of transportation as barrier to accessing services. • risks of driving a car. Drive only when it is essential—work, food. Can’t legally obtain a driver’s license if undocumented. • public transportation limited. • poor treatment by bus drivers. • racial tension between riders and drivers.

  31. Transportation

  32. Police Service Attitudes • 31% do not trust the police enough to report a crime or seek their help. • Reasons for lack of trust:

  33. Victims of Crime • Every focus group mentioned tensions between African-Americans and immigrants • Immigrants are easy targets • Language • A lot of CASH • Can’t open bank accounts b/c of lack of documentation (banks now accepting matricula consular identification cards)

  34. Victims of Crime • 21% of survey respondents victims of crime • National rate is less than 10%

  35. Employment Hardship • Because they are undocumented, feel vulnerable at work: • “If you’re illegal, you can’t do anything; otherwise they’ll call the ‘migra.’” • Risk of deportation too great to seek redress: • “One comes to this country to work, not to look for problems.”

  36. Housing • Median Number of People per Household = 6 • 15% live in households with 10-16 people • Average Number of People per Household in Maryland 2.6 • Median Number of People per Bedroom = 2.6

  37. Number of Children in Household Median = 1 Child

  38. Location of Children

  39. High Levels of Social Isolation • 13% belong to sports/recreational group and 2% belong to social group • 54% said they do not have relations with other racial or ethnic group • Of the 46% who do have relations with other groups, 61% said they are work-related only • 75% have family/friends in area • In-group relations strong(er), out-group relations weak

  40. In the last 12 months sources of information used: • Television—84% • Friends—72% • Family—52 % • Libraries—8% Word of Mouth Key--Trust

  41. Who Helped Resolve Problems Here?

  42. Sources of Support/Services • 56% belong to a religious institution here, 44% do not. Main point of contact for immigrants in receiving communities—apart from work. • Religious Affiliation:

  43. Contact with Local Educational Institutions • 16% have attended school here • 27% have taken a class of some type • English—86% (church, library) • 27% said children in their household attend public schools • Of those, 12% problems registering

  44. Summary • New, inexperienced immigrants • Isolated from receiving community • Want to Learn English • Transportation is a major problem • Here to stay in this region • Growing, growing, growing population • Hardworking, industrious

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