Immigrant clings to school bus axle

A head teacher has condemned Government border controls after an illegal immigrant managed to hitch a 200-mile ride to the UK clinging to the underside of a school coach.

The 35-year-old man, believed to be from Sudan, had ridden on the vehicle’s axle after climbing underneath near the Eurotunnel Calais terminal in France and evading security checks.

He was only discovered as he emerged “disorientated” from under the coach, as youngsters arrived back at the Perry Beeches Academy in Birmingham, executive head teacher Liam Nolan said.

Mr Nolan hit out at what he called an incompetent “lapse in security”, saying it was “jeopardising” his pupils’ education.

The man was arrested after the coach’s arrival late on Saturday night, and is now being processed by the UK Border Force.

Immigration and Security Minister James Brokenshire said the Government was working with the French authorities to tighten security measures.

Mr Nolan said the coach had been through a security check at Calais, adding he was “particularly angry the man was not found at the time”.

Pupils arrived back outside the school’s gates after 11pm, at which point the immigrant emerged in what Mr Nolan described as “an awful state”.

“He had clung on since Calais,” he said.

“He was disorientated as you would expect, and looked very ill.

“He just stumbled out from underneath the coach, and the teachers looked after him, rang the police and called the headteacher.

“A lot of us today have been thinking about that man, and the pupils have been asking after him.”

Mr Nolan said at no point had any school staff or pupils spotted the man during the homeward leg of their journey, adding everyone was taken off the coach at Calais for passport and security checks.

“He was of no danger at all to the pupils or staff at the school, ” said Mr Nolan.

“His interest was not to endanger anyone, but, I presume, to come to the UK to better his own life.”

However, Mr Nolan said the “lapse in security” posed questions as to how the academy’s future school trips abroad would be operated, and he was writing to parents about the incident.

Mr Nolan criticised the fact the man had managed to get underneath the coach without being spotted.

“We run this trip to Normandy for all our Year 9 pupils to learn about the history of the D-Day landings, learn about the heroes involved and provide them with a life experience,” he added.

“When you get to the Eurotunnel terminal, security takes everyone off the coach – staff, pupils and driver – and everyone has their passports checked.

“They then look inside the coach, and underneath, yet this man has got aboard without them noticing.

“The Government’s border agency is now jeopardising the outstanding education we provide at Perry Beeches.

“Because of their incompetence, I am now in a position where I am seriously considering whether this is a type of a school trip we can do again.”

A spokesman for West Midlands Police said its officers were called to the school “after a man was found on the axle of a coach returning from a school trip to France”.

“The 35-year-old from Sudan was arrested and is being dealt with by the UK Border Force,” he added.

Mr Brokenshire said: “The security of the UK border is our first priority, which is why the Government has spent millions of pounds on strengthening controls and upgrading technology at Calais and Coquelles.”

“As our border controls become stronger, we are seeing illegal immigrants taking increasingly dangerous risks to enter the UK.

“We are working with the French authorities to help tighten up security even more to stop this from happening.”

At the weekend, Home Secretary Theresa May met French counterpart, Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve, and agreed a series of joint commitments to tackle the immigration problems at Calais, including tightening security measures.

UK and French law enforcement agencies have also been targeting the organised criminal gangs responsible for the people trafficking and smuggling behind the issue.

Both governments are also pushing for action across Europe and internationally in a bid to tackle the problem.

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How immigrant entrepreneurs are making it

For immigrant-owned small businesses in the U.S., ties to their home countries can be very lucrative.

Firsthand knowledge of the culture as well as connections abroad make immigrant entrepreneurs well-positioned to navigate the complicated export landscape.

That’s true for Royce Leather, a family-owned leather business in Secaucus, N.J.

Harold Bauer founded Royce Leather in 1974, just one year after moving to the U.S. from Austria.

Today, 65% of his business comes from exporting to 15 countries. That’s up from 45% just five years ago.

Bauer, who comes from two generations of leather artisans, has been able to capitalize on family connections in Western Europe (particularly Germany and Austria) for sales leads and distribution partners.

“That’s where we’re from — where we understand the customers best,” said Billy Bauer, 22, Harold’s son and marketing director of Royce Leather.

Billy added that his father’s foreign language skills (he speaks five languages) give him an edge in tapping into markets like France and Russia.

Related: I’m a legal immigrant, but not allowed to have a job.

Experts agree that immigrant entrepreneurs have a leg up.

“Family ties, familiarity with the culture, market, and investment environment in the home country all could facilitate export” said Qingfang Wang, an associate professor of Geography and Public Policy at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.

Wang is quick to note that not all immigrant-owned businesses are able to leverage these ties, however they do have a “much higher propensity for participating in transnational activities.”

Doug Barry, an author and trade specialist with the U.S. and Foreign Commercial Service, agrees.

“Immigrant-owned companies are more likely to export and to be successful in doing so,” he said. “Why? One reason is that they just do it. They are comfortable dealing with other cultures.”

Related: Want to boost sales? Start exporting

This is true of Priska Diaz, a Peruvian immigrant and founder of New York-based startup BittyLab, which makes innovative baby bottles. She didn’t anticipate exporting so early on — her business is just one year old — but she didn’t shy away from it either.

Diaz, who moved to the U.S. at 17, wanted to first build and establish her business in the U.S. market. But due to “unsolicited international demand” for her Bare Air-Free Baby Bottles, she started exporting her products (sold via Amazon) to Canada, the U.K. and Australia.

Now, international sales make up 10% of her business, which she plans to grow. Diaz, 39, said her childhood friends (who live around the world) are proving to be a real business asset in finding international distribution partners (she’s been contacted by distributors in South Africa, Turkey, and the Middle East).

“There’s a level of trust that makes it easier to work with my friends,” said Diaz.

Ben Guez echoes that sentiment. The French entrepreneur launched electronic cigarette company Ophis a year ago in Beverly Hills. He said his European roots help him bridge partnerships abroad.

“Our international clients feel confident to talk with two immigrant entrepreneurs,” said Guez, who co-founded Ophis with Rudy Halioua, also from France.

Related: Secrets to success from Smalltown USA

Still, few U.S. small businesses are exporting their goods and services — just about 300,000 of some six million.

But those that do export anticipate ramping it up over the coming year, according to a survey from Western Union Business Solutions. They surveyed small and medium-sized businesses who engage in international trade. Nearly half said they’ve grown exports over the past 12 months.

Those looking to start exporting or expand their international base can learn from immigrant entrepreneurs.

“It’s natural for them to go to a foreign country to sit down with people who are not like them,” said Barry. “These characteristics are not exclusive to immigrant business owners and can be learned and applied by anyone.”

View this article on CNNMoney

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Previously deported immigrant facing firearm violations

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Previously deported immigrant facing firearm violations
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Baltimore City aims to grow immigrant population

Baltimore City hopes to strengthen the its immigrant population, according to a report released this week by the mayor’s office.

 Baltimore City Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake released the New Americans Task Force report The Role of Immigrants in Growing Baltimore, Recommendations to Retain and Attract New Americans as part of Baltimore Welcoming Week.

The report offers 32 recommendations to further strengthen Baltimore as a place of welcome, economic opportunity, and inclusion.

“As Baltimore continues to welcome new Americans, it is imperative that we recognize the unique opportunities immigrants bring to our communities,” said the mayor. “In order to continue to grow economically and socially, we must continue to work together to break down barriers and level the playing field.”

A key goal of the Rawlings-Blake administration is to grow the city by 10,000 families over the next decade, and the ever-growing immigrant population is part of that growth.

According to the report, as of 2011, more than 45,000 foreign-born immigrants call Baltimore home—75 percent of whom have arrived since 1990.

The report also reflects that immigrants have a significant impact on the local economy. Baltimore’s immigrant workers earned a median household income of more than $40,000 in 2011, totaling approximately $1 billion in wages that trickle back into the local economy.

Baltimore’s immigrant population owns more than 7,500 homes in the city, and rents another 11,700 homes.

Additionally, 21 percent of the city’s  businesses are owned by immigrants, contributing sales of approximately $1.3 billion to the local economy and helping to drive commerce within the city’s communities.

The report is the result of a collaborative effort between the Office of the Mayor, The New Americans Task Force, and The Abell Foundation.

The New Americans Task Force was established in the summer of 2013 by Blake to develop a plan to retain and attract immigrants as part of her goal to grow the city. 

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The Daily Fix: NYC Plans for Immigrant Children, Adrian Peterson Won't Play Sunday, and Giant Squid Dissected

The Obama administration’s response to the surge of immigrant children coming to the United States to escape violence in Central America has been a program of “rocket dockets”—pushing these cases through immigration courts quickly, sometimes deporting children in a matter of months to deter would-be immigrants.

But in New York City immigration courts, the city is taking the opportunity to hook these children up with needed city services, The New York Times reported.

On Tuesday city officials announced a program to help children enrolled in school and health care programs when they show up for immigration hearings.

“Connecting these vulnerable children to educational, health and social services is vital to helping our families and communities gain stability,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio in a statement. This is “a more humanitarian approach.”

According to the Office of Refugee Resettlement, there are about 1,350 unaccompanied minors in New York City. “Getting kids in contact with the schools is frankly the second most urgent step after giving them a lawyer,” Camille Mackler, director of legal initiatives at the New York Immigration Coalition, told the Times. “We need to make sure kids have access to services because they won’t know what they’re entitled to.”

In other news…

Bad Spot for a Swim: An American was arrested by South Korean marine sentries after trying to swim from there to North Korea on Tuesday. Three Americans are in jail or awaiting trial in North Korea. On Sunday a North Korean court sentenced Mathew Miller to six years’ hard labor for being in the country illegally. (via USA Today)  

Congress OKs Islamic State Fight: Obama will likely get congressional authorization for his plan to fight the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, though many lawmakers believe the plan doesn’t go far enough. (via The Associated Press)

Guilty Verdicts for L.A. Sheriff’s Department: James Sexton, a former Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy, is the seventh official in the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department to be found guilty of interfering with a federal investigation of prison abuse and misconduct. He could spend up to 15 years in prison. (via Reuters)

Peterson Won’t Play: The NFL switched positions on whether Adrian Peterson, the Minnesota Vikings running back who is accused of hitting his four-year-old son with a switch, will be allowed to play Sunday. On Wednesday the league announced that Peterson has been deactivated and must keep away from team activities while his legal case is being resolved. (via The Huffington Post)

Head of the Class: The MacArthur Foundation announced its class of 2014 grant recipients. The list includes cartoonist Alison Bechdel, labor organizer Ai-jen Poo, and Jennifer Eberhardt, a Stanford social psychologist racial coding, stereotypes of race and crime. There are 21 recipients, and the award, known as the “genius grant,” comes with a stipend of $625,000. (via MacArthur Foundation)

A Really Big Squid: In December a fisher in New Zealand caught a massive squid—11 feet long and more than 770 pounds. Yesterday, scientists dissected it and made a live video. (via Vox)

The Daily Fix is your chance to act today to change tomorrows headlines by taking action on the latest stories. Look for links to petitions, pledges, and other social actions embedded throughout these news items. Tweet your #TheDailyFix ideas to Staff Writer Nicole Pasulka.

Related stories on TakePart:

The Daily Fix: Adrian Peterson Faces Second Child Abuse Accusation, U.S. to Fight Ebola, Philippine Volcano Erupting

The Daily Fix: Miss America Talks About Abusive Ex, EU to Fight Islamic State, and Hurricane Hammers Baja

The Daily Fix: Witnesses Describe Michael Brown’s Death, Senators Condemn NFL, and Texas Textbooks Ignore Civil Rights

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:Immigrant Labor, Immigrant Rights"

David Bacon, an immigration activist, has published a provocative article on the relationship between the immigration debate and larger debates about trade policy and labor organizing. I am not convinced that his focus on “rights” is the proper avenue: I prefer to see this debate go forward using the language and logic of solidarity. But, Bacon’s article points out many of the issues that would remain unaddressed even if comprehensive immigration reform were to pass tomorrow, which it won’t.  

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immigrant – Yahoo News Search Results
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:Immigrant Labor, Immigrant Rights"

David Bacon, an immigration activist, has published a provocative article on the relationship between the immigration debate and larger debates about trade policy and labor organizing. I am not convinced that his focus on “rights” is the proper avenue: I prefer to see this debate go forward using the language and logic of solidarity. But, Bacon’s article points out many of the issues that would remain unaddressed even if comprehensive immigration reform were to pass tomorrow, which it won’t.  

Source Article from http://ncronline.org/blogs/distinctly-catholic/immigrant-labor-immigrant-rights
:Immigrant Labor, Immigrant Rights"
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http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigrant
immigrant – Yahoo News Search Results
immigrant – Yahoo News Search Results

:Immigrant Labor, Immigrant Rights"

David Bacon, an immigration activist, has published a provocative article on the relationship between the immigration debate and larger debates about trade policy and labor organizing. I am not convinced that his focus on “rights” is the proper avenue: I prefer to see this debate go forward using the language and logic of solidarity. But, Bacon’s article points out many of the issues that would remain unaddressed even if comprehensive immigration reform were to pass tomorrow, which it won’t.  

Source Article from http://ncronline.org/blogs/distinctly-catholic/immigrant-labor-immigrant-rights
:Immigrant Labor, Immigrant Rights"
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Detroit joins list of immigrant-friendly cities


















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Federal plan calls for immigrant detention facility in Texas for children, parents

Five years after claims of scathing human rights abuses ended the detention of immigrant families at the T. Don Hutto Residential Center, federal officials last week announced a plan to build another detention center in South Texas to hold immigrant parents and children.

If the deal goes through, which officials in Frio County say is more than likely, the new site 70 miles southwest of San Antonio would be run by the same private prison company that ran the old facility northeast of Austin: Corrections Corporation of America.

Proponents of the plan say they aren’t concerned by the company’s track record and are excited by the prospects, pointing to potential job growth and economic development. But the proposal is sparking the anger and concern of lawyers and advocates who question whether the contract was open to other bidders and who say federal authorities are repeating mistakes by locking up children.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said Friday that it was working to “finalize contracts with construction and service providers” and couldn’t release much information, including when the facility would open, how much it would cost or how many people it would accommodate.

But the agency plans to use 50 acres of land in the town of Dilley, next to an existing site known as Sendero Ranch, a housing community for oil workers in the Eagle Ford oil and gas shale formation. Residential buildings on the property could be used to hold up to 680 immigrants while new structures are built, according to ICE officials.

The proposal follows the opening in the past three months of similar facilities in Karnes City, where an all-male detention facility has been converted to accept more than 530 women and children, and in Artesia, N.M., where a former law enforcement training center can now hold nearly 650 detainees.

Federal authorities say the centers are meant to help keep families together while they await immigration hearings in overburdened federal courts. The spike in children entering the United States illegally — thousands of whom are fleeing drug and gang violence in Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador — has overwhelmed U.S. Border Patrol agents and had federal agencies scrambling to set up makeshift shelters nationwide.

Supporters of the plan say there is no better alternative to handle such an influx of minors, and the immigration detention system, they say, has undergone vast reforms to treat detainees more humanely since the failings at Hutto.

The Hutto facility, less than 35 miles outside Austin, houses only adult women after the American Civil Liberties Union and University of Texas Immigration Law Clinic sued in 2007 over what they described as deplorable conditions. Children there were not provided education or medical care, lawyers said, and were housed with their parents in cells, forced to wear prison uniforms and locked up for many hours each day.

Authorities removed families from the facility in 2009.

In a statement Friday, ICE said it now “ensures that family detention facilities operate in an open environment that includes play rooms, social workers, medical care, and classrooms with state-certified teachers and bilingual teachers.”

But human rights lawyers and advocates say that families at Karnes City and Artesia are being threatened with deportation if their children don’t behave and that parents are being forced to give traumatic asylum claims in front of their children.

“Corrections Corporation of America does not have child welfare experience, and they should not be detaining children,” said Barbara Hines, co-director of the UT immigration law clinic.

Others complained that the detention facilities are in remote locations, making it difficult for parents to access fair representation. Officials in Dilley and Frio County also said the only company they have met with in the past month has been Corrections Corporation of America, raising concerns among some that the government might have tried to circumvent fair competition regulations.

The company, which has the largest market share in the $3 billion private prison industry, has faced lawsuits in Idaho and Ohio over allegations of rampant violence, poor staffing, gang activity and contract fraud.

As officials struggle with the flow of minors, they must weigh options that are economically efficient, compassionate and humane for detainees and that comply with immigration laws, said Alonzo Pena, retired ICE deputy director. But there must be more oversight and accountability over for-profit corporations in the detention system, he said.

“After all, they are dealing with people who have not committed a crime but have entered this country without the proper documentation,” he said. “Many are seeking asylum.”

— Austin American-Statesman

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Federal plan calls for immigrant detention facility in Texas for children, parents
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