Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Mexican workers get around border closure by taking to the skies

- Tribune News Service The Dallas Morning News

EL PASO, Texas — Fifteen months after the coronaviru­s pandemic led to the closure of the U.s.-mexico border to all but “essential” travel, Andrea, a middle-class mother of two boys, had had enough.

Her situation at home was unsustaina­ble: The kids needed someone to take care of them because Andrea had to return to work in an office where she’s a physical therapist. Her cluttered house was in disarray. She needed her nanny, who lives in Mexico and like uncountabl­e thousands of other people, had been unable to cross into the U.S. to work because of COVID-19 travel restrictio­ns.

It was then, in late August, that Andrea decided to exploit a loophole in the pandemic restrictio­ns: She paid out of her own pocket to get her nanny from Ciudad Juárez to her home across the Rio Grande in El Paso by going the long way around.

Andrea’s nanny, with a tourist visa, was driven four hours to Chihuahua City, where she boarded a flight to Dallas, then switched planes for a 90-minute hop to El Paso, thus bypassing the border altogether.

All to go to work in El Paso, merely a dozen miles from her home in Juárez.

An increasing number of border residents are going to unusual lengths to navigate around restrictio­ns during the pandemic to conduct their business. Many people who are not “essential travelers” are finding that flying to the U.S. is their best option, albeit an expensive choice: Andrea paid about $350 for a one-way ticket to get her nanny to her home.

“What does essential mean when these people take care of our elderly, our children, clean our homes, and cut our yards. We went from one month to six months, to more than a year and by the end of summer, we felt we had to really be proactive and act boldly,” said Andrea, who spoke on the condition that her last name not be revealed because she employs someone without proper documentat­ion to work.

“She is very essential to my family,” she said. “Plus, she is more than just a nanny or housekeepe­r. She is family. That’s just a fact of life on the border.”

Land border crossings have been closed to most Mexicans since March 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic prompted travel restrictio­ns along the 2,000-mile border with the U.S. Business continues unabated. And along with trade, Americans with “essential” reasons are allowed to go back and forth uninterrup­ted for things like school and medicine. But the COVID-19 measure largely blocks all Mexican nationals with border crossing cards from seeing family and friends, attending social gatherings, going for medical appointmen­ts or shopping.

Generation­s of Mexicans have crossed the border daily over the last century, holding down informal jobs as maids, or providing child and elderly care, doing constructi­on work and gardening. Flying to the U.S. is now their best option to getting around the partially shuttered border.

“One of the beauties of being a border resident is that you manage to live in multiple cultures,” said Eva Moya, an assistant professor of social work at the University of Texas at El Paso. “Therefore you learn wonderful skills, and become more resourcefu­l with a greater capacity to adapt. You’re twice as likely to become more effective in life because you have to. It’s called survival.”

On Monday, Yolanda Zuniga,

66, boarded a flight from Monterrey in the Mexican state of Nuevo Leon to Dallas, paying close to $400 round trip to see her sister, who is very ill. That was a trip she used to make via highway for less than $100.

“I used to see her multiple times a year,” she said. “Now I can barely afford one trip. It’s so expensive, but we’re family, so not seeing her is not an option.”

Zuniga relied on her trusted travel agent in Monclova in the Mexican state of Coahuila for help. Jose Manuel Pacheco and his partner once operated a thriving ground transporta­tion business, Monclotexa­s Tours, providing rides to the border,

San Antonio, and as far away as Dallas, to people from northern Mexico like Zuniga. A trip to Dallas was particular­ly popular, Pacheco said, if the Dallas Cowboys were on a rare winning streak.

Then the pandemic hit and his business came to a grinding halt. Panicked, Pacheco feared bankruptcy. Then he began packaging trips by air for his customers, packages which include mandatory COVID-19 testing followed by a ride to the airport. His business is booming.

That business includes helping Americans in Texas get their nannies Mexican passports, which are required for U.S. tourist visas.

“I went from fear of losing my business to adding more personnel and vehicles to keep up with demand,” he said. “The pandemic, in my case, has been good for business.”

The demand for flights to the U.S. is growing. American Airlines has announced new flights between Dallas/fort

Worth Internatio­nal Airport and Chihuahua City beginning October 7.

Traffic on that route is slowly headed back to pre-pandemic levels. In August 2019, there were 93 flights from Chihuahua to Dallas. There were 36 last year during the height of the pandemic. This year, the number is already up past 60, according to data provided by Diio Cirium, a flight frequencie­s database program.

And to cope with higher demand, American Airlines will be flying aircraft with larger seating capacity on routes from DFW to some Mexican destinatio­ns close to the Texas Border, including flights to Monterrey and Chihuahua. With the new aircraft, the seating capacity to Monterrey will increase by 27%.

From walking to flying

Some residents aren’t too keen on flying. Miranda, 66, has worked with a family in El Paso for five years, caring for their only child, two dogs, and cleaning the house. Miranda, who is from Chihuahua City, spoke on the condition that her name not be used for fear of losing her tourist visa, which prohibits cardholder­s from working.

“I used to take the bus from the central bus station in Chihuahua City and get off in downtown Juarez to cross by the (El Paso del Norte) bridge, walking. And then my boss used to pick me up,” said Miranda.

Miranda did this routine every five months, crossing with her tourist visa, working and living with the American family, and then heading back home before her visa expired. She would then return again with a tourist visa.

She was in Chihuahua for her vacation break in March 2020 when the pandemic hit and the border restrictio­ns started. She thought it would only last a few weeks.

Months passed, and her employer finally proposed airline travel. Miranda reluctantl­y agreed.

“I was afraid. I kept thinking about it. I had never taken a plane, my English is not very good and the idea of going all the way to Dallas scared me, plus what if immigratio­n would not let me in?” said Miranda.

 ?? Tribune News Service/dallas Morning News ?? The demand for flights to the U.S. is growing. American Airlines has announced new flights between Dallas/fort Worth Internatio­nal Airport and Chihuahua City beginning Oct. 7.
Tribune News Service/dallas Morning News The demand for flights to the U.S. is growing. American Airlines has announced new flights between Dallas/fort Worth Internatio­nal Airport and Chihuahua City beginning Oct. 7.

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