Dayton puts out the welcome mats
In old North Dayton, It’s easy to spot the newcomers. Over
the past few years, about 3,000 Turkish refugees have settled here and set
about rebuilding this blighted neighborhood. Decaying houses with weed-choked
lawns are giving way to tidy dwellings with colorful paint jobs. As his minivan
winds through the streets, businessman Islom Shakhbandarov points out the white
picket fences the Turks favor–a sign that they have achieved the American
Dream. “This,” he says from the front seat, “is the Ellis Island of our
region.”
Southwest Ohio has never been much of a melting pot. Even
now, Dayton’s proportion of foreign-born residents is among the lowest of any
large U.S. city. But economic decline is the mother of reinvention. Dayton’s
population has plunged 40% since 1960, as the loss of manufacturing jobs
hollowed out its middle class. “We were hit really hard,” says city manager Tim
Riordan. And so in 2009, Dayton began plotting an unlikely path to
renewal–growing its economy by courting immigrants.
Two years later, the city adopted a series of policies
designed to lure new residents: tutoring for foreign students, support networks
to help entrepreneurs clear complex bureaucratic hurdles, and translation
services to help immigrants integrate into the community. Libraries began
stocking books in new languages. Police officers were directed not to check the
immigration status of victims or witnesses of crimes, or of people suspected of
minor offenses.
The push to repopulate the city by wooing foreigners was an
unusual move at a moment when states from Alabama to Arizona were requiring
cops to detain suspected undocumented immigrants. City officials braced for an
outcry against the proposal, but few residents balked. (The only pushback at
public meetings came from nonresidents who warned that the city could become a
magnet for the undocumented.) The initiative, known as Welcome Dayton, won
unanimous support from the city commission. “We made a policy decision to be
open,” says Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley. “This is a city that will welcome you.”
Word of mouth helped. A handful of Ahiska Turks, a stateless
ethnic minority that was granted refugee status to escape persecution in
Russia, resettled in Dayton in 2006, lured by cheap housing and solid jobs.
They told friends that neighbors were tolerant of their Muslim faith. Now the
Turkish community’s leaders have become some of Dayton’s best boosters, working
to court foreign investment and pumping their own cash into the local economy
through new trucking, logistics and real estate businesses.
Dayton is also home to robust communities of Central
Africans, Indians and Hispanics, many of whom have started businesses or
cultural agencies of their own. City officials have sought to stitch them into
the cultural fabric with celebrations of diversity like a new annual parade to
commemorate the Mexican Day of the Dead. And the lenient approach to law
enforcement has soothed nerves. “They’re not chasing people or trying to focus
on their legal status,” says Gabriela Pickett, an art-gallery owner and Mexican
immigrant who has lived in Dayton since 2001. “That’s a battle they don’t
want.”
None of this has required much money, and the economic gains
have been relatively modest. But the new approach is paying off. In the year
after enacting the policy, Dayton’s immigration rate grew by 40%, nearly six
times the state average. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce lauded Dayton as one of
seven “enterprising cities.” And Dayton has plans to expand its approach by
recruiting immigrant entrepreneurs, using a visa program that offers green
cards to foreigners who invest in rural or cash-strapped areas.
Dayton’s model is attracting copycats elsewhere in the
Midwest. And the experiment has “changed the culture and the way people
perceive immigrants,” says Tony Ortiz, vice president of Dayton’s Hispanic
Chamber of Commerce and the head of Latino Affairs at nearby Wright State
University. “Instead of a burden, they see these folks as potential taxpayers
and contributing members to the area. Instead of chasing them away, all we have
to do is make them feel welcome.”
Dayton is also home to robust communities of Central Africans, Indians
ReplyDeleteAre they here legally?
Have they broken laws to remain in the US illegally?
Why do Hispanics have the right to cross the border illegally reside in the US and be forgiven when millions wait in line?
Why should we be so accepting as Mexico and SA countries dump their children at the US border?
How many millions more should we allow to cross into the US before we say, enough is enough and close the border? 10 million? 50 million?
I don't know the answer to the legality question of any of the immigrants flocking to Dayton Lou. They may all be illegal. That no longer check unless it is for a major crime. Traffic stops they don't care, witness to a crime they don't care.
ReplyDeleteI spent some time living in the Dayton area. It's an armpit. I have no desire to go back ever.
Ain't it amazing what a law abiding work ethic can accomplish?
ReplyDelete