The surrogate
It begins with a woman who yearns for a baby and another who is willing and able to give her one. You can imagine the motives of the prospective parents. But what about the woman willing to carry a baby, give birth and then walk away?
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With jobs scarce, sales of one-way tickets to Mexico are up
By
Saundra Amrhein, Times Staff Writer
In print: Sunday, August 31, 2008
People gather to board the bus at El Expreso bus stop in Plant City. Buses making the trip to Mexico used to be full only on weekends, but now are full almost every day. Some of the passengers are immigrants who came here to work but have decided to go back home because jobs are harder to find.
PLANT CITY — On a Wednesday afternoon, in the gravel lot of El Expreso bus depot, Benito Ramos waits with his life packed in several plastic tubs.
After eight years in the United States, he is going home to Hidalgo, Mexico, to his mother and a small concrete block house built with the money earned clearing tables in Tampa restaurants.
"You can't survive like before," said Ramos, 28, standing in front of the clapboard depot building with its low-slung porch filled with passengers and suitcases.
When times were good, Ramos worked 16 hours a day at two restaurants, five days a week. His weekly check was $520. But for months, bosses have slashed his schedule. He was lucky to work six hours a day for two or three days, bringing in just $117 a week.
"It got to the point where you can't pay rent, you can't pay the bills," he said.
A few weeks ago, Ramos bought a bus ticket and joined legions — perhaps thousands — of illegal immigrants going back home.
The reason, immigrants and experts say, is the slow economy — particularly the crash of the construction industry and the slowdown in the retail and low-wage service sectors.
No one is certain about the size of the exodus. One group says the undocumented population has dropped 11 percent in a year. Other experts dispute those findings and say the decline is much smaller.
One thing seems clear: Those leaving tend to be single or unattached men like Ramos. They now face stiff competition from legal and illegal immigrants who had climbed the economic ladder and put down roots during the construction boom. Now they're all scrambling for jobs — even returning to the fields — and also face competition from out-of-work Americans.
Struggling and lonely, the single men say there's no point in staying.
"I miss my family," said Levi Salas Aguilar, 21, preparing to board a bus to Mexico, three years of construction work behind him. "You feel very alone here. It's not the same without your family."
• • •
Alma Carvajal, the director at El Expreso terminal in Plant City, noticed a rise in business two years ago.
That's when more single men started buying one-way tickets to Mexico. Since then, business has climbed by 50 percent, she said.
"Three years ago, it was only full on weekends," she said of the 48-seat bus that arrives daily. "But today, every day it's full."
Van driver Antonio Trevino brings passengers from Sarasota, Tampa, Clearwater and Bradenton to the bus depot. Since January, most of his passengers have been single immigrant men headed home to stay.
"They made good money in construction, but now they go five or six months without work," Trevino said.
In July, the pro-enforcement Center for Immigration Studies issued a report that said the illegal immigrant population had declined 11 percent, or 1.3-million people, between August 2007 and May. It credits enforcement by immigration officials.
But critics dispute the study's findings, which are based on census data of Hispanics between the ages of 18 and 40 with a high school degree or less and unspecified immigration status.
Experts agree undocumented migration has slowed since 2007. But they attribute it to the economy, not enforcement.
"They don't migrate if they are not assured a job when they get to the United States," said Wayne Cornelius, director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at the University of California at San Diego.
However, his research with Mexican migrant workers in San Diego led him to conclude that most illegal immigrants are staying put. With increased border enforcement, many have paid smugglers thousands of dollars to bring them and their families here. They aren't going to throw that away for even bleaker job prospects back home, he said.
"Nearly all of those with more than a year of U.S. residence and close relatives living with them in the U.S. intended to ride out the recession," Cornelius said. Unattached, jobless men would have more reason to leave, he added.
Single or unattached men make up a quarter of the estimated 12-million illegal immigrants, said Jeffrey Passel, senior demographer at the Pew Hispanic Center, a Washington-based research organization.
Passel is preparing a report about the recent drop in undocumented migration, which had been growing by 500,000 people a year since 2000. Those days appear to be over.
"What almost certainly has happened is that fewer people are coming and more people are leaving," Passel said. "It's possible that the (overall population) numbers could be decreasing."
• • •
Farmers are not worried.
As they prepare their fields for fall crops, their phones are ringing off the hook.
"Right now I have people contacting me asking me for work," said Don Balaban of Balaban Farms in Thonotosassa, who turns them down. "They are unemployed from the building trade."
Legal and illegal immigrants who had planted roots with good construction jobs are now competing for landscaping jobs and field work.
Alejandra Polanco, 28, grew up migrating with her parents. She hated it.
A permanent resident, Polanco installed drywall during the construction boom. Her husband installed air conditioners. They rented an apartment. They bought a Ford Escape.
Then they lost their jobs. Her husband's company hired him back. But he now migrates for construction jobs in other parts of the state. They moved in with his parents in Gibsonton.
Polanco unsuccessfully sought jobs at packinghouses. Now she might try the fields.
"I really don't care right now where I work, as long as I get paid and can help my husband," she said.
With more competition from unemployed construction workers, single men in the fields feel the squeeze, said Dave Moore, executive director of the Beth-El Mission in Wimauma. Come fall, there won't be enough farm jobs to go around, he said.
Immigrants like Ramos leave grateful for the work opportunities but weary of looking over their shoulders. In Mexico he plans to live off his savings and pick up some farm work, which pays very little. If the U.S. economy improves, he'll be back.
"Maybe in two or three years," he said.
Saundra Amrhein can be reached at amrhein@sptimes.com or (813) 661-2441.
[Last modified: Sep 08, 2008 11:30 AM]
Comments on this article
by Don
Sep 8, 2008 11:30 AM
get more buses fast!!
by Cliff
Sep 8, 2008 10:26 AM
Ditto on the last comment. When are American journalists going to wake up and realize that American workers are struggling to make ends meet. When do Americans get their due?
by Barbara
Sep 4, 2008 5:39 PM
They faced competition from Americans coming for work? We have too many politicians that support illegals before their own citizens! Round them up, ship them out, before they bring their families here!
by jeannie
Sep 4, 2008 5:37 PM
I agree if they want to be here they should be "legal" BUT BUT BUT it's sad to say that THEY work better than many AMERICANS. Some of the Americans refuse to get there hands dirty and these folks will work from sunrise to sunset and NEVER COMPLAIN
by Maya's Mom
Sep 4, 2008 4:44 PM
Finally! Don't let the door hit you on the way OUT!!! Take your Illegal Kids with you!!!
by Bob
Sep 4, 2008 4:39 PM
Tell Pablo the answer is NO. If you try and come back in two or three years we will SHOOT YOU ON SIGHT!
This is how civilizations are destroyed people. Once gone, you don't get them back, just ask the Romans.
by RIP USA
Sep 3, 2008 2:26 PM
Good news in this slowed economy. Maybe when they try to get back in in a few years there will be actually border enforcement and a fence.
by Wil
Sep 3, 2008 2:22 PM
It is sad this article is trying to make US feel sorry for the poor little illegal immigrants. I say, let them go. If they want to come back, there is a LEGAL way to come to this country. If you use that, you will be welcomed. Lawbreakers are not!
by Not a Red-Neck
Sep 3, 2008 11:30 AM
This article really brought out all the nasty comments from the rednecks, hillbillies, and skin heads. If citizen feels they are competing with an illegal immigrant for a job that is sad. They really want to wash dishes or pick vegetables all day?
by Craig
Sep 3, 2008 11:30 AM
Crack down on all the employers of illegals and the illegals will become self deporting. We simply cannot keep supplying all the social services they want as well as the demand they make upon medical services. Perhaps the recession is helping!
by TheVanman
Sep 3, 2008 11:29 AM
Dont let the door hit you on the way out.....Just kidding.....Just leave!
by Zeppo
Sep 2, 2008 10:40 PM
Maybe they should take all the business owners that did the hiring with them. As long as they get away with hiring illegals, they will. Confiscate their business.
by steve
Sep 2, 2008 10:34 PM
Forget outsourcing. Insourcing is killing us much worse. The last of the American jobs are being sent home in monthly payments to Mexico.
by Rowdy
Sep 2, 2008 10:34 PM
I have watched these Illegal Lawbreakers depress the wages of us construction workers for far too many years now. Anyone who employs anyone who is illegal needs to forfeit their business or their homes if they hire day laborers! Enough is enough!
by Dave
Sep 2, 2008 7:52 PM
Boo hoo, it breaks my heart to hear that the invaders that have caused wages to stagnate and have consumned America's social services are going home.
Boo Hoo!!! Get out!!! NOW!!!
by Al
Sep 2, 2008 2:05 PM
If, as an American, you are mad at an immigrant for stealing your job, why don't you go back to school and get a job that they can't perform? I know why, because it's too hard & would require some sacrifice. That's why we are becoming 3rd world.
by aldo
Sep 2, 2008 9:25 AM
IF YOU WOULD HAVE TOLD ME THAT IN A COUPLE OF YRS, THEY WOULD GET ON A BUS CALLED EL EXPRESSO AND GO BACK ,,REALLY I WOULD HAVE LAUGHED MY BUTT OFF ,,BUT IT SEEMS SO... EL EXPRESSO...HOW FUNNY IS THAT. MY BLOOD PRESSURE JUST DROPPED TEN PERCENT,,,,,
by cindy
Sep 2, 2008 9:24 AM
A FEW OF MY FRIENDS AND I (ALL RETIRED WOMEN CITIZENS OF THE US) HAVE CONSIDERED MOVING TO MEXICO BECAUSE OF THE HIGH COST OF LIVING IN THE US. WE CAN'T AFFORD GAS FOR OUR CARS AND NOW EATING ONE MEAL A DAY IS THE NORM.
by Joe
Sep 2, 2008 9:23 AM
Very interesting story. Most of us want stronger immigration laws, but when hispanics are leaving becuase of economic reasons, it really makes you pause and think. Please vote for your favorite Democrat, and vote often!
by Marianna
Sep 2, 2008 9:23 AM
WONDERFUL!! Go home! We should be buying the tickets for the illegals to get home. And for you "do gooders" out there asking "whah whah whah, who is going to farm the land?" I say lets get our overpopulated prisons to work. It's a win win!
by Steve
Sep 2, 2008 9:23 AM
I wonder if they all sent in their absentee ballots for Obama before they left. Good riddance, I say - if you come back, do it legally.
by Jeremy
Sep 2, 2008 9:23 AM
president Bush solved the illegal immigration problem. He destroyed our economy. So much that even illegals don't want to live here anymore. Thanks dubya
by Bill
Sep 2, 2008 9:23 AM
Please take them all with you!
by BUBBA
Sep 2, 2008 9:23 AM
ITS JUST LIKE THE MEXICAN TO CUT AND RUN WHEN TIMES GET TIGHT. IRONIC HOW THE SAME BAD ECONOMIC TIMES WHAT EXCUSES CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR AMONG AMERICAS IS DRIVING JOSE ET.AL. INTO LEGALITY.
by john
Sep 2, 2008 9:22 AM
No, you won't be back. American taxpayers such as myself have had it with the illegal invasion. If our politicians want to hold office, they will put a stop to it.
by Hardhat0038
Sep 2, 2008 9:22 AM
Yeah, he can make enough money so that when times get tough he can go back to his own toilet of a country and spend all the tax free money he's been earning under the table, if it's one small bright spot about the econonmy, it's them leaving.
by Stephanie
Sep 2, 2008 9:22 AM
Awesome maybe they all will go back and we can get back in our grocery stores, take back our ENGLISH language, stop paying for all their children to be born and become US Citizens. Free medical, food stamps etc.
by Frank
Sep 2, 2008 9:22 AM
Adios!
by Bill
Sep 2, 2008 9:20 AM
I got an idea lets smuggle mexicans out of the US and back to Mexico What a deal cheaper and gives a poor white man a job in helping his southern brother to go back home
by brodie
Sep 2, 2008 9:19 AM
odios amigo
by Adam
Sep 2, 2008 9:19 AM
If it's "undocumented," how do we know it dropped 11% in a year?
by joetampa
Sep 2, 2008 9:18 AM
At last! Some good news! Secure our borders so they can't keep sneaking in.
by Vincent
Sep 2, 2008 9:18 AM
Bye Bye
by Joe
Sep 2, 2008 9:18 AM
Good, stand up for your jobs U.S. men, send them all back to there own country, maybe WE! would have some work for us legal AMERICANS!!
by Kim
Sep 2, 2008 9:18 AM
Well, I guess this is the upside of our failing economy...and a more effective way of getting some illegals out of the US. Perhaps we'll have tighter border security by the time these guys decide they want to come back.
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