Development Works The Complete Set | Page 39

ESSAY  6 gies proven to improve apple quality. With improved produce and better knowledge of the market, farmers can increase the income generated by their orchards—giving them a potential alternative to migration. The international funding provided by CRS and Vista Hermosa helped the FDC secure matching funds from the Mexican Ministry of Agriculture for a cold storage facility, so that apple farmers don’t have to pay others to store their crops. “We now have the ‘hook’ to get the resources we need,” said FDC advisor Jesus Emiliano. “Now that we have some money for the project, we ask [the government], ‘How much are you going to put in?’” Another potential example of how to develop alternatives to migration is found in a chicken coop in the village of Verapaz, about 30 miles east of El Salvador’s capital, San Salvador. This project brings together the government of El Salvador, the Ford Foundation, the Salvadoran immigrant community (or diaspora) in Los Angeles, and a Salvadoran nongovernmental organization. The poultry program is specifically intended to generate employment and provide alternatives to unauthorized migration. The idea for the project came from Salvadorans living in the diaspora in Los Angeles. Their organization, the Emergency Committee for Aid to El Salvador, was originally focused on disaster relief. Later, its members became interested in supporting efforts to create jobs and livelihoods in their home communities in El Salvador’s rural areas. The Verapaz project began in 2010 with the participation of the local government and the Ministry of Agriculture. The project is managed by 15 local women who maintain the chicken coop; gather, clean, and package the eggs; and sell them at a local market. Participants said the eggs generate about $1,300 a month. They earned a small profit in 2011 but seek to expand so that the operation provides a viable job for all 15 participants. To serve as a realistic alternative to immigration, the poultry program needs to enable each woman to earn at least $300 a month. This project is a small work in progress. But its partnerships and innovative channeling of contributions from immigrants in the United States make it a potential model for job creation. A Role for U.S. Development Assistance The projects in Avila Camacho and Verapaz are not the only projects seeking to produce jobs and reduce poverty in the migrant-sending communities of Mexico, El Salvador, and their neighbors. Projects may be supported by local people themselves through groups like the FDC, by U.S. nonprofit groups such as Vista Hermosa, and/or by diaspora groups such as the Salvadoran & Myths Realities Myth: Immigrants are taking jobs away from U.S. citizens. Reality: It seems like a good bet that “subtracting immigrants” from the workforce would lower America’s stubbornly high unemployment rates. After all, then there would be job openings. But only about 2 percent of Americans work on farms. The reality is that there have been numerous attempts to recruit citizens to do field work—even at jobs that pay more than minimum wage—but none of them have been successful on a large scale. In our abandonment of farm labor as a common occupation, Americans are not alone. Other developed countries—and developing countries that are a bit wealthier than their neighbors—also have agricultural work forces dominated by immigrants. El Salvador, while the source of many workers on U.S. farms, is itself home to about 200,000 unauthorized immigrants who work on its own farms. nn Myth: The United States doesn’t need to worry about immigration issues beyond just deporting the unauthorized immigrants themselves. Reality: Immigration enforcement is expen- sive—for example, in 2010 it cost the Department of Homeland Security an estimated $1 billion to detain and deport 76,000 Central Americans. Yet if conditions in their home communities have not improved, people who have been deported don’t “stay deported.” In recent surveys, for example, 43 percent of those deported to Central America say they plan to return to the United States within a year. The figure is even higher among those who left family members behind in the United States. When workers are deported, the money they are saving from their U.S. jobs and sending home stops—worsening the situation in imp