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Staff photo by Dan Henry/Chattanooga Times Free Press - Daniel Luna teaches Bentura Soria how to play the guitar while at his music studio in Dalton, Ga., August 19, 2010. The two of them are in the country legally, but Luna has recently lost a number of students to relocation and deportation due to stronger immigration enforcement in Dalton.
DALTON, Ga. — For Sandra Reyes, Georgia was home since she was 9, the place where she graduated from high school and became involved in her community.
And where the reality sank in that she was an illegal immigrant.
“I didn’t realize what it really meant to be undocumented until I was about to graduate from high school,” the 25-year-old said in a telephone interview from Dallas. “So I really never thought I was going to have to leave Dalton.”
She and her husband, Ignacio, 31, left Dalton four months ago in the face of tougher immigration enforcement and high unemployment rates, she said.
“The situation in Dalton is not the most ideal for undocumented immigrants,” said Reyes, who recently graduated from an online college with a bachelor’s degree in psychology. “You never know when you might get stopped and end up being deported.”
The Reyeses are not alone. There are no hard numbers on how many illegal immigrants have left the Dalton-Whitfield County area because no one knows how many were there to start with. But some in the community say evidence points to an exodus of Hispanic immigrants at least over the past two years.
“Anecdotally, many feel that many of the male population within the Hispanic community may have left looking for jobs, and that’s certainly what most any of us would do,” said Brian Anderson, president and chief executive officer of the Dalton-Whitfield Chamber of Commerce.
Daniel Luna, a Mexico native and music teacher in Dalton who’s here legally, said he has lost students because they became unemployed or were deported.
“It’s almost a given that, if you get stopped for any reason and you are driving without a license, you are going to get arrested and if (you) are in the country illegally, deported,” he said.
“A lot of my students have offered to pay more if I teach them in Chattanooga,” he said. “Others often miss class because they can’t find anyone to drive them.”
Previously, Dalton Mayor David Pennington said the city picked up less garbage, that more apartment buildings and trailer parks are empty and that more businesses have closed.
“Whether that is due to any kind of (out) migration or just the general economy is hard to measure,” Anderson said.
Because the local Hispanic student population has not decreased, the belief is that the children and perhaps their mothers and grandmothers have stayed behind, he said.
MORE POLICE ATTENTION?
Luna and Reyes say there have been more police roadblocks, especially in areas with high concentrations of Hispanics.
Seventy-one percent of the people arrested for driving without a license in Dalton from August 2009 through July 2010 were Hispanic, police records show.
Since drivers must produce a Social Security number and proof of citizenship or legal status, people in the country illegally can’t get a driver’s license in Georgia or Tennessee.
But Dalton Police Department spokesman Bruce Frazier said police only set up road checks for seat-belt or drunken-driving enforcement operations.
“We don’t discriminate based on race, gender or ethnicity,” he said. “I don’t know why that perception would be out there.”
Frazier said people don’t get pulled over simply for driving without a license.
“They have to break some traffic violation,” he said.
Anyone who feels discriminated against “can file a complaint with our department, and it will be investigated,” he said.
As of July 31, the Whitfield County Sheriff’s Office had identified 422 people for deportation in the current fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30, compared with 379 in the previous fiscal year.
But Jan Pourquoi, an immigrant from Belgium and long-time Dalton resident, doesn’t think there’s enough immigration enforcement taking place.
“If anything, it’s symbolic to appease people,” he said. “What we need is mandatory use of E-verify for all employers.”
E-verify is a federal database employers can use to verify that potential hires are eligible to work.
Pourquoi said illegal immigration hurts the community by depressing wages, pushing the middle class out of the city and lowering the tax base through the use of uneducated, low-skill workers.
“I don’t blame the poor family trying to make a living, but somewhere down the line you have to be objective about it,” he said.
Living in Dallas now, Sandra Reyes said she’s looking for master’s degree programs and possibly a waitress job, while her husband is doing odd jobs.
Hoping that federal immigration reform law eventually will give them the option to legalize their status, the couple is “focusing on starting our own business and waiting,” she said.
“But making plans to buy a home or have children will have to wait,” she said.
Continue reading by following these links to related stories:
Article: Immigration in reverse
Article: Georgia lawmakers support repealing birthright citizenship
Perla Trevizo joined the Chattanooga Times Free Press in 2007 and covers immigration/diversity issues and higher education. She holds a master’s degree in newswire journalism from Universidad Rey Juan Carlos in Madrid, Spain, and a bachelor’s degree in political science from the University of Texas. She was selected as an International Reporting Fellow by the International Center for Journalists and in 2009 received an honorable mention for her story “Families Broken Apart” from the Tennessee ...








Arresting the owners of such businesses that hire illegals, with heavy fines, would be a stronger message than arresting the illegals that will be soon replaced.
eeeeeeeeeeek, I agree. Something needs to be done especially in this economy. If they are here legally then that is good as it means they are going by the laws of the land but illegal needs to go.
It's interesting how Perla Trevizo has contact with illegal immigrants as if aiding and embedding. I hope those that are leaving Dalton is no pouring into Chattanooga. Ron Littlefield calls this the refuge city. We do not want illegals here! Every time I see a group of suspected illegals working, I report the company to ICE. Yes employers, ICE will be knocking on your doors and auditing your files and workforce, so clean it up or shut it down!
When all the decent working family oriented hispanic people have gone what will be left...only the drug dealers and other undesirables. Perhaps this is what Dalton wants? If you wish to find someone to blame for this immigration mess, you should start with the owners of (who will go unnamed) Carpet mills that were responsible for importing this cheap labor in the first place.
I agree with Dave. Owners of the carpet mills advertise jobs down in Mexico.
Don't Blame The Carpet Mills For All Of This Mess. The First One To Use The Mexicans Was Conagra. I Think Conagra Needs there Share Of the Blame! If It Was Not For The Mexicans The Carpet Mills Would Not Be As Big As They Are Today!
CarpetMaker, just because Conagra was breaking the law don't mean everybody else should. Both of you need to seriously learn business ethics; wait a minute, ICE is teaching that to your companies now.
What cha gonna do when they come for you?
And remember a majority of those carpet co. owners, donate to the GOP. So while the GOP talks about immigration, they directly benefit.
mkelley said: "And remember a majority of those carpet co. owners, donate to the GOP. So while the GOP talks about immigration, they directly benefit."
Bingo! The political contributions of the CEOs of Dalton's major carpet mills can all be found online.
Who do you think greeted our star candidate for governor, ex-representative, illegal alien basher when he came to town?
Voters are being played for fools, and sadly, most of them are.
"But Jan Pourquoi, an immigrant from Belgium and long-time Dalton resident, doesn’t think there’s enough immigration enforcement taking place."
This guy has been here long enough to know what is going on. It is a big professional wrastling match.
INS is leaving a way for the immigrant's to keep breaking the law. The INS needs to have there laws changed to take the people that are hiring these people to court and charge them to the highest degree.
Don't let the door hit you in the ass as you illegals leave the area. Take the carpet executives with you that lured you here. Dalton has gone down hill in the years. The GOP as I might say has helped hide the problem at the local level being bought out by the mills
Can Perla Trevizo get the message out to her friend Reyes to come and get the rest of illegals and take them out of here.
If I get stopped driving without a license I'll get arrested too and I've been here since birth. That's the law. As for law on hiring illegals we have them, but they are not inforced. The last time there was arrests made on a company hiring illsgals they bought off the federal judge and the company scum went free.
"Because the local Hispanic student population has not decreased, the belief is that the children and perhaps their mothers and grandmothers have stayed behind, he said."
The men are making enough tax free money, working under the table for criminal contractors(funded by government and insurance money for hurricane damage) in the gulf region, to fly back and forth to Atlanta on commercial airlines(this can be easily documented, I have witnessed it numerous times).
With no tax burdens, and plugged into every government handout and charity known to man, the wife, kids and grandma(left behind in Dalton) can afford to ride around in a gaudified, gas guzzling luxury SUV.
Why doesn't the newspaper assign a reporter to counter balance Perla, and report the other side of this issue?
Perla is the token Hispanic. She is not a journalist- she is a propagandist for the open borders politicians, both Dumocrat and Repub criminal element.
A once great publication, the Times should now be called the "Blunder."
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