Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Puerto Ricans struggle to find careers

Island’s brightest face language barriers and costly certificat­ions

- By Mike Schneider Associated Press

ORLANDO — Kaisha Toledo was studying for a doctorate in psychology in Puerto Rico, but after four years in Florida, she still hasn’t found a permanent job in her field.

Ricardo Negron passed the bar on the island, but still can’twork as a lawyer in Florida. Carlos Martinez got his nursing license in Puerto Rico, but still serves up lattes as a Starbucks manager in Orlando.

Residents of the U.S. territory have been U.S. citizens for a century now, and should have a builtin advantage as Americans when theymove to the mainland.

But as the island’s best and brightest join an exodus of nearly half a million Puerto Ricans coming stateside to escape the territory’s 10-year economic recession, they’re hitting the same barriers most migrants face: language difficulti­es, costly certificat­ions, confusing requiremen­ts and culture clashes.

“We don’t know the system yet that well, so we’re learning on a learning curve,” Toledo said. “We just find that jobs are very specific and they say you need to have two or three years of experience, but it’s like, ‘OK, but if you don’t open the door for me, howwill I be able to get that experience?’ ”

Puerto Rico’s Instituto de Estadistic­as said managers and profession­al workers made up the largest category of people moving fromthe island in 2015. Since then, the island’s 3.4 million people have endured multimilli­on-dollar debt defaults, soaring foreclosur­es, a crumbling pension system, states of emergency at government agencies, deep cuts in education and an unemployme­nt rate of 12 percent, nearly triple the mainland rate.

“Everybody is leaving the island, fromthe neurosurge­on to the janitor,” said Vicente Feliciano, an economist in Puerto Rico. “Young people are leaving, and thus, you havefewer taxpayers to supportan increasing­ly elderly population.”

NewYorkwas their top destinatio­n during the last major migration wave in the 1940s and 1950s, but now Central Florida is where they land, with more than1milli­on Puerto Ricans living in the state.

“There’s the weather, and you will find Puerto Ricans, you will find the food, everywhere. So it’s the next best thing to being home without having the issues,” said Negron.

Before leaving the island in2015, Negron had lined up a legal assistant job at anOrlando lawfirm. But after arriving, his positionwa­s cut. Althoughhe­doesn’twork as a lawyer, Negron has found job happiness running a nonprofit for the gay and lesbian Hispanic community in central Florida.

“I would have to shut myself in to study, and I’m like, ‘How am I going to live? I’m not going to get more student loans to study,’ ” Negron said.

Martinez hasworked at atheme park, a hotel and a store since he left the island three years ago, but he still hasn’t found a nursing job because he hasn’t found the time ormoneynee­dedfor theprepcla­ss needed to study for his license in Florida.

“At the moment, I can’t do it,” Martinez said. “I got tomakemone­y.”

Many Puerto Ricansmove from the island without the proper preparatio­n, said Sami HaimanMarr­ero, who runs a marketing and business developmen­t firm in Orlando. With her friend, Jackie Mendez, she now offers orientatio­n sessions to new arrivals on howto adapt to life andworkpla­ce norms in central Florida.

“You can’t kiss your co-workers on the cheek. Don’t start talking about personal things. You are supposed to be there at five minutes to the hour and be ready to work. You need to have command of English,” Marrero said.

Janice Dones, who moved from Puerto Rico a year ago and attended a recent orientatio­n said, “It sometimes doesn’t feel like we are part of the country.”

Her feelings reflect a common refrain among islanders, especially those who voted for statehood in a nonbinding referendum this month, that Puerto Ricans are treated like second-class citizens. Gov. Ricardo Rossello now hopes to persuade Congress to make the U.S. territory the 51st state, which is unlikely under Republican control, since Puerto Ricans tend to favor Democrats.

“We have been a colony for 500 years, and we have had U.S. citizenshi­p for 100 years, but it’s been a second-class one,” Rossello said after declaring victory.

When she moved to Orlando four years ago, Toledo got a job as a mental health therapist and case manager at a private company, but soon the company ran out ofmoney and stopped paying her. She eventually found a job out of her field, as a community organizer. She loves it, but misses the fulfillmen­t ofworking with autistic kids.

Associated Press writer Danica Coto contribute­d to this story.

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