| Irving can help
immigrants
By Mark Krikorian
The Dallas Morning News
September 14, 2003
The settlement of large numbers of immigrants in Irving has
sparked conflict over declining quality of life. Residents complain of housing
code violations, unacceptable public behavior, etc., while activists claiming
to speak for immigrants resort to cries of racism.
These tensions are popping up all over, as America experiences the largest
wave of immigration in its history. Last year, 1.5 million immigrants, legal
and illegal, settled in the United States, bringing the total foreign-born
population to more than 33 million.
The problem discussed the most, perhaps because local government has a direct
role, is violation of housing codes. Conflicts have arisen over this from Daly
City, Calif., to Montgomery County, Md. A recent report on illegal housing
units in New York noted that "the neighborhoods in which the greatest number
of complaints about illegal conversions are made tend to be those with the
largest immigrant populations." And in Los Angeles, thousands of immigrant
families live in illegal garage apartments without bathrooms, running water or
electricity.
But the corrosive effect that mass immigration can have on quality of life is
not limited to housing code violations. There are other issues perhaps less
susceptible to government action such as excessive noise, junk cars in the
back yard, day laborers loitering on street corners and even a seemingly minor
matter like litter. This is a matter of public safety and property values: the
threats to fire safety, health and sanitation are matched by an amorphous but
real sense of seediness, disorder and declining standards.
The culture clash that Irving and other cities are experiencing is only
secondarily a conflict between Latin and Anglo-Saxon norms; it is primarily a
conflict between the pre-modern behavior of the village and the expectations
of a modern, high-tech, bourgeois society. In effect, two kinds of
assimilation are necessary for most of today's immigrants: first is
assimilation into a new country; second is assimilation into a new way of
life. Either one of these transitions would be difficult, but undertaking both
of these changes at the same time is extremely disorienting and destabilizing.
Part of the answer is that the level of immigration needs to be reduced - but
that doesn't do the city of Irving any good, since immigration law is mainly a
federal preserve and most immigrants currently living there are going to stay.
There are law enforcement responses Irving can and should undertake: muscular
enforcement of housing codes, for instance, and police cooperation with
federal immigration authorities.
But such actions, while necessary, are not sufficient. The community must
reach out to immigrants and help them understand what is expected of them. A
century and a half ago, the Roman Catholic Church fulfilled this function for
Irish immigrants, who really, really needed training in urban life. At the
turn of the last century, voluntary organizations like the North American
Civic League for Immigrants promoted the Americanization of newcomers from
southern and eastern Europe.
But no one is doing this for the Mexicans and Central Americans coming today.
On the one hand, most Americans today seem content to let newcomers sink or
swim. On the other, groups posing as defenders of immigrants' rights are so
suffused with self-loathing relativism that they are unwilling to hold
immigrants to the same standards of modern middle-class behavior that they
would demand of their own children.
Neither indifference nor coddling is the solution for Irving, or for America.
What immigrants need is tough love: a warm welcome combined with instruction
about what is expected of them.
Local churches and ethnic organizations need to join with groups not usually
involved with newcomers - from the Chamber of Commerce to the Daughters of the
Republic of Texas - to help integrate these new people into our communities.
This goes beyond teaching the English language and American and Texas history,
to teaching newcomers when to mow their lawns, how to join the PTA, and why
they shouldn't dump their trash in the back yard.
# # #
The Center for Immigration Studies is a non-profit, non-partisan research
organization which examines and critiques the impact of immigration on the
United States. It is not affiliated with any other group.
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