City a way station for migrants with eyes on Texas
MONTERREY, MEXICO >> Graced with Texas brands like H-E-B, Whataburger and 7-Eleven, this affluent city in northeastern Mexico is home to global conglomerates and posh neighborhoods, enjoying strong economic and cultural ties to Dallas-Fort Worth. It is a mere two-hour drive from the Texas border.
Francisco Contreras, who migrated there from Guatemala, has grown fond of Mexico’s third-largest metro, with its wide avenues, skyscrapers and plentiful jobs.
Then there are the smuggling organizations. They have offered to take him to the United States, he said, to a choice of destinations.
It was late summer. Standing outside a faithbased shelter, borrowing a cellphone, he pointed to a map of border cities within a short ride. He said he is in no “real hurry” to continue his journey to North Texas, where he knows many other Guatemalans working in construction.
“I’m waiting,” he said, “for the right moment.”
How Contreras got there underscores , not just as a prosperous city with a need for more workers, but also as a high-profile way station, an increasingly important logistical hub for some people fleeing violence and economies ravaged by nearly three years of the COVID-19 pandemic.
A long layover
Instead of rushing to the Texas border, Contreras and many other migrants are waiting before heading north, settling here while watching the shifts in U.S. immigration policy.
And when these migrants finally decide to continue their journey, many will come to North Texas, motivated by jobs and networks of families and friends, according to Mario Lino Garcia, an immigration specialist and director of Clinica Juridica Migratoria (Judicial Migratory Clinic) at the University of Nuevo León in Monterrey.
“Many migrants have stayed in Monterrey and raised or formed families,” said Victoria Rios Infante, coordinator of Tendiendo Puentes (Building Bridges), an effort to integrate migrants into their communities. She co-authored an October 2020 Tufts University study, examining how migrants have transformed Monterrey’s neighborhoods.
“This is no longer just the American dream, but also the regiomontano dream,” she said, using the term for native residents of Monterrey.
The capital of the state of Nuevo León is home to more than 5 million people. By comparison, the DallasFort Worth metro area has about 7.7 million residents. Both are home to many international companies, and both are big sports towns.
“The relationship between Mexico and the United States flows through North Texas and Monterrey. You cannot understand the relationship between the U.S. and Mexico without Monterrey and Dallas,” said Francisco de la Torres, Mexican consul general in Dallas.
“I took (Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson) to Mexico this past spring, but the trip would have been incomplete if we had not visited Monterrey,” he said.
“Dallas and Monterrey share many similarities,” Johnson said. “Much like Dallas, Monterrey is the economic engine of a large and dynamic metropolitan area. Both cities are rich with history, culture, major professional sports teams and fantastic food.
“And our cities are similarly home to strong and resilient people. It was a genuine pleasure to visit Monterrey earlier this year, and I wish I could have stayed longer. For 30 years, Dallas and Monterrey have been sister cities, and I am hopeful that we can build an even stronger relationship in the years ahead.”
Monterrey is also a leading city of labor, legal and undocumented. The city is a major transit point for farm workers applying for legal temporary work visas. They travel to the U.S. legally, without their families, to pick oranges, cucumbers, sweet potatoes, onions and berries for specified periods of time before returning home.
More visas
In fiscal year 2021, an estimated 239,274 legal visas were issued to Mexican workers headed to Texas, North Carolina, Michigan, California and other states, according to the U.S. State Department. Since fiscal year 2017, those H-2A visa issuances in Mexico grew from 147,272, or by 62%. The majority of visas were issued by the U.S. Consulate in Monterrey.
The city is on a key trade route used by millions of commercial trucks hauling cargo, which too often includes human beings.
The so-called “NAFTA highway,” named after the North American FreeTrade Agreement, turns into Interstate 35 on the U.S. side of the border. It is a straight shot to DallasFort Worth, and then all the way north to Canada.
The highway has also become a lynchpin for criminal organizations and smugglers, according to U.S. and Mexican law enforcement agencies.
The cities of Ciudad Acuña, Piedras Negras, Nuevo Laredo, Reynosa and Matamoros are all adjacent to the Texas border, providing a pipeline of migrants from Venezuela, Haiti and several Central American countries. Many of the migrants come through Monterrey.
“This isn’t just any city, this is Monterrey, the Sultan of the North, as we know it here, with a giant economic engine,” said Lino Garcia, the immigration specialist. “Here, people somehow blend in, and because of (the city’s) economic might and size and because of its enviable location, it’s a magnet for organized crime, which in turn preys on vulnerable migrants.”
Of the 2.2 million U.S. apprehensions in fiscal year 2022, more than 1 million took place in the Border Patrol sectors of Del Rio, Laredo and the Rio Grande Valley. The border cities in those sectors are all within a threeto six-hour drive from Monterrey. The Yuma sector in Arizona, which came in second place, accounted for an estimated 310,000, followed by El Paso with 308,000, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
‘Continuous’
“Monterrey represents not so much a gushing pipeline, but a dripping pipe,” said Ariel Ruiz, a policy analyst at the Washington-based Migration Policy Institute. “They’re a small number, but continuous.”
The neighboring states of Coahuila and Tamaulipas remain key entry points for the Texas border. But Saltillo, the capital of Coahuila, has less than 1 million people and, in terms of job creation, pales in comparison to Monterrey.
Meanwhile, in Tamaulipas, the border cities of Nuevo Laredo, Reynosa and Matamoros are plagued by drug cartels. While Monterrey has its own security issues and gender-based violence, the U.S. government warns against all travel to Tamaulipas due to kidnappings and other crimes. That warning resonates among migrants.