Business and the Workforce

Business and the Workforce

Immigrants not only bring diverse skills and perspectives to the U.S. workforce, they often fill employment gaps in crucial fields. We advocate for expanded work visas and related programs so our labor force can continue to benefit from immigrant workers and remain competitive in the global economy

Multilingual Immigrant Uses Her Skills to Advise Corpus Christi Business Community

Multilingual Immigrant Uses Her Skills to Advise Corpus Christi Business Community

Growing up under a dictatorial regime in Panama, Lorena Parada-Valdes longed to live in a democratic country. In 1979, she had her chance. That year, she was one of just four Panamanian college students to receive a merit-based scholarship to study in the United States. After graduating from Bates… Read More

Indian Native Finds Success in America, Gives Back to Adoptive Home of Corpus Christi

Indian Native Finds Success in America, Gives Back to Adoptive Home of Corpus Christi

Indian native Kamlesh Bhikha grew up in an entrepreneurial family. His grandfather was a sugarcane and cotton farmer and his father manufactured diamonds, selling the gems he’d fashioned from rough stones. Bhikha also aspired to be his own boss. “The harder you work, the more you reap,’” he says. “And… Read More

Allowing Spouses of H-1B’s to Work Makes America More Competitive

Allowing Spouses of H-1B’s to Work Makes America More Competitive

As part of the April 2017 “Buy American and Hire American” executive order, the Trump administration announced that it intends to revoke the employment eligibility of the spouses of foreign workers with H-1B visas. These changes, if implemented, could have distressing effects on many of these workers, their… Read More

The Invisible Wall That President Trump Has Already Built

The Invisible Wall That President Trump Has Already Built

Legal immigration and the number of foreigners visiting the United States has taken a serious hit within the last year, as the Trump administration makes changes to policies and procedures without any Congressional action or approval. These actions have already had a disturbing, cumulative effect as the administration begins to… Read More

Pioneering Latina Aviator Tells the Stories of Other Latinos

Pioneering Latina Aviator Tells the Stories of Other Latinos

A child of Mexican immigrants, Graciela Tiscareño-Sato grew up in small, north Colorado towns dominated by meatpacking plants. Her mother worked on the assembly line, her father in high-end men’s clothing stores as a tailor. Together they raised five children. It was stable, honest work, says Tiscareño-Sato, but she aspired… Read More

KERA News: How Immigrants Benefit The Local Economy

KERA News: How Immigrants Benefit The Local Economy

The top local stories this morning from KERA News: A new report from the group New American Economy looked at the economic contributions of immigrants in the city of Dallas. This comes as the U.S. Supreme Court this week declined to take up the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or… Read More

After Finally Escaping Vietnam, Refugee Works to Help Those Who Come After Him

After Finally Escaping Vietnam, Refugee Works to Help Those Who Come After Him

In 1982, at age 31, Walter Nguyen made his fifth and final attempt to escape Vietnam. Prior attempts had landed him in jail, but he did not have a choice. Food was scarce, and, because he had worked as a press officer for U.S.-backed South Vietnamese forces, the communist government… Read More

Dallas-Based Artist and Immigrant Found Success Thanks to Her Parent's Drive for a Better Life

Dallas-Based Artist and Immigrant Found Success Thanks to Her Parent’s Drive for a Better Life

As one of six children in her family in Taipei, Taiwan, Jin-Ya Huang grew up watching her parents struggle to overcome poverty. Her mother scraped together money by cooking and sewing, and her father worked and lived at a distant cement factory, where he was a mechanical engineer. When he lost his job, money… Read More

Maine Dreamer: ‘People Should Not Be Living in Fear in America’

Maine Dreamer: ‘People Should Not Be Living in Fear in America’

“EM,” a young immigrant brought to the United States from El Salvador at the age of 3, has been living in fear since the Trump administration announced in September 2017 that it would phase out DACA unless Congress takes action. “If something happens and I’m deported, I would not go… Read More

Dreamer: ‘They Are Going to Throw Us Somewhere and Not Care’

Dreamer: ‘They Are Going to Throw Us Somewhere and Not Care’

For now, Sara Hamdi works the delivery counter at a Dayton, Ohio, Olive Garden. But the 27-year-old undocumented immigrant dreams of going back to school, studying business, and one day opening her own restaurant. “I’d like to bring some heart into this world, and I feel like food brings a… Read More

All gifts are matched dollar for dollar

No one should face the immigration system alone

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