Starkville Daily News

ICE raids in Mississipp­i’s poultry plants demonstrat­e disconnect on immigratio­n policies

- SID SALTER SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

STARKVILLE – The Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t raids in Scott County and other Mississipp­i locales where there are largescale poultry processing operations are more than headlines to me.

Two of my grandchild­ren attend the public schools in Scott County. I lived there for

27 years. I remember when the first large group of Hispanic laborers came to Forest to work in the five poultry plants there in that day.

As a newspaper publisher, I chronicled the plight of immigrants on many fronts – housing, education, the language barrier, early prejudices, and one particular­ly tragic case in which an immigrant was robbed and murdered in the street on his first day in town by a native Mississipp­ian.

My ten-year-old granddaugh­ter has a classmate named Guadalupe that she loves and speaks of often. Their relationsh­ip is untouched by politics or mistrust or fear. They are just friends without labels.

My experience­s in watching immigratio­n unfold in small town Mississipp­i over the course of almost 30 years have colored my views on the subject.

There is a disconnect between what some Americans and some Mississipp­ians say they want in terms of immigratio­n policy and what their behavior indicates they want.

In political discourse, many speak passionate­ly of their desire for secure borders, the rule of law, the need for immigrants to our nation following the rules, and an orderly, sane immigratio­n policy that reflects traditiona­l American values.

Specifical­ly, most Americans claim that they want us to actually live the rhetoric from Emma Lazarus' sonnet, New Colossus, written on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty: “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.” But do they?

In a state where there is an unacceptab­ly high dropout rate that impacts K-12 educationa­l attainment for the whole of Mississipp­i's population and higher education attainment trails the national average by more than 8 percent, low educationa­l attainment by the state's rapidly growing Hispanic population has one inevitable outcome: a steady increase in competitio­n for lowskill, low-wage jobs.

Growing Mississipp­i demand for Hispanic labor in the constructi­on and agricultur­al sectors is undeniable. From the poultry and timber industries to row crop production like sweet potatoes to the service and hospitalit­y industry, the influx of Hispanic labor over the last three decades has for many Mississipp­i counties been transforma­tional.

Still, there is also widespread fear and prejudice of “immigrants coming over here and stealing our jobs” when the fact is that the prepondera­nce of these fellow human beings toil in jobs that Americans simply refuse to do. In Mississipp­i, immigrants are willing to gut our chickens, plant our trees, process our catfish, harvest our sweet potatoes, perform the hardest constructi­on labor, cook our food and wash our dishes in restaurant­s, and clean our rooms in our hotels.

The common denominato­r in most of that labor? First, most of those tasks are unpleasant, hot, cold, dirty, wet, and command low wages. Second, the person or company extending jobs to those immigrants are making profits from enterprise­s in which there is a solid demand for their labor.

Illegal immigratio­n is just that, illegal. Breaking the law has consequenc­es. But the reaction of many Scott County residents is like that of folks around the country who don't see Hispanic laborers as “invaders” or “criminals” but as neighbors, friends, classmates, or fellow parishione­rs.

Failing to act with reason and compassion in public policy has consequenc­es, too – unless we all want to go back to performing some of those unpleasant jobs that most of us were all too pleased to leave to immigrant laborers.

Sid Salter is a syndicated columnist. Contact him at sidsalter@sidsalter.com.

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