USA TODAY US Edition

Coverage of Latinos outside of immigratio­n is lacking

Our new series, Hecho en USA, remedies that fact

- Nicole Carroll Editor-in-chief USA TODAY

Reporter Alan Gomez grew up in Miami. Both parents are from Cuba. And he’s always been bothered by media coverage of Hispanics.

“The vast majority of major media focus is only through the lens of immigratio­n, and the last few years, illegal immigratio­n,” he says. Hispanics are covered “as people crossing a border” instead of “people living in the U.S., living their lives, being members of this society.”

We’ve started a new series, Hecho en USA, to do just that: explore, discuss and draw attention to issues important to Latinos living their lives in the United States, being members of this society. We are publishing the stories in both English and Spanish.

This week, Kate Cimini of the Salinas California­n (part of the USA TODAY Network) wrote about how Hispanics are the fastest-growing group of entreprene­urs but still face institutio­nal racism as they build their businesses.

Last month, Gomez wrote about the changing demographi­cs of Little Havana in Miami, how Cubans are moving out and being replaced by immigrants from Mexico and Central America.

He was surprised to learn that before Cubans settled in Little Havana, the area was home to Jewish families. As subsequent generation­s of those families moved on, Cuban immigrants moved in. And now as Cubans move on, newer immigrants are settling in.

Little Havana is a microcosm for what’s happening around the country, Gomez says.

“Hispanics are just the latest big wave of immigrants. The more you can share their whole stories, Americans can see parallels to how their own families got here.

“When you only view immigrants as people who illegally jump the fence or lie to get asylum, it just dehumanize­s them. It doesn’t allow people to appreciate them for who they are – human beings.

“It’s impossible to overstate how important this is.”

He’s right.

Just as it’s our responsibi­lity to cover immigratio­n issues, it’s our responsibi­lity to cover the full lives of all Americans, with nuance, with context.

Cimini found that the number of Latino business owners grew 34% over the past 10 years. The growth of all business owners? Just 1%.

That’s according to a recent study from Stanford University. The same study showed Latino businesses contribute about $500 billion each year to the U.S. economy. They employ more than 3 million people.

Orlando Osornio, the owner of food truck Tortas al 100, told Cimini it’s important for us to cover Latinos in business, because too many people think Latinos only take from the U.S., and don’t give.

Cimini also talked to Fausta Ibarra, 59, who owns her own hair salon, Tropical Cuts, in Salinas. Ibarra told her that many Hispanics don’t trust or understand financial institutio­ns, or they are denied investment given to other business owners, so often their start-up loans come from family and friends.

“Los Latinos tienen que ganarse el pan cada día,” said Ibarra in Spanish. “Yo sí pienso que los Latinos pueden contribuir más si nos dan la oportunida­d para sacar adelante a nuestros hijos. Yo pienso que todos tenemos las ganas de progresar pero no se nos dan las facilidade­s que se les da a una persona ciudadana de aquí.”

Cimini translated that to English: “Latinos have to start all over again, every day,” Ibarra said. “I do think that Latinos can contribute more to this country if they give us the same opportunit­y to better ourselves and our children. I think we all want to progress, but they don’t give us the same tools they give someone who was born here.”

Cimini, a former Spanish teacher who has lived in South America and Spain, speaks three languages. She used both the Spanish and English quotes for a reason.

“People may be surprised to see Spanish in English newspapers,” she said. “It’s important that we acknowledg­e that other languages exist and that all language is good language. It’s important to see other languages regularly and not see it as ‘other.’ “

Reporter Chris Quintana is one of the first in his family to graduate from college. He wanted to tell the story of hurdles Latinos face in higher education.

“It’s pretty personal to me,” says Quintana, who graduated from the University of New Mexico in Albuquerqu­e in 2012.

Nearly half of Latino students are the first in their families to go to college. About 70% of Latino undergradu­ates come from families in the bottom half of earners, he reported. About 2 in 3 white students come from the top half of earners. And while college enrollment is on the decline overall, Hispanic college students rose from 3.17 million in 2016 to 3.27 million in 2017.

What that means, Quintana says, is that universiti­es can’t just enroll the students, they need to support them. Many Latino students may not have experience­d family members who can help them navigate paying for and succeeding in college.

“People may underestim­ate what people don’t know. I saw that reflected in my reporting,” Quintana says. “You’re learning on the fly and you’re being penalized for it at the same time.”

National editor Cristina Silva launched the Hecho project as a way to cover Latinos beyond crime and immigratio­n. Now it’s a conversati­on.

After this week’s story on Latino entreprene­urs, readers began posting about their own efforts to start a small business. After Quintana’s higher ed story, people were comparing college experience­s.

“I love that people are sharing their personal stories with us,” Silva said. Next up, we’ll have a story on how Hispanic comedians balance humor with avoiding stereotype­s. And, we’ll look at how larger numbers of Latinos are joining the military, but the number of Latino officers has stayed the same.

When she was a younger reporter, Silva says, “My editor told me no one cares about this. It was difficult to get stories about Latinos published at some of the places where I worked.”

With this project, “I didn’t have to defend this series or make repeated arguments for it. Everyone was just like, ‘yes, let’s do it.’”

She pauses, “We shouldn’t even call it a project.”

She’s right.

Coverage of issues important to Latinos – and all diverse population­s – shouldn’t be special.

It should just be what the media does – for everyone.

Thank you for reading, and thank you for supporting USA TODAY. To receive this column as a newsletter, visit newsletter­s.usatoday.com and subscribe to The Backstory.

 ?? DAVID RODRIGUEZ/THE SALINAS CALIFORNIA­N ?? Fausta Ibarra, 59, owner of Tropical Cuts Beauty Salon in Salinas, Calif., greets a costumer early morning on Feb. 7.
DAVID RODRIGUEZ/THE SALINAS CALIFORNIA­N Fausta Ibarra, 59, owner of Tropical Cuts Beauty Salon in Salinas, Calif., greets a costumer early morning on Feb. 7.
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