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http://www.cis.org/articles/1995/texascoverage.html
Selected news coverage of

Shaping Texas: The Effects of Immigration 1970-2020



Strains from immigration studied
Growth estimates called overstated
David LaGesse
The Dallas Morning News, April 14, 1995

WASHINGTON - Immigration is helping fuel population growth in Texas to
levels that the state can't afford, a Washington group said in a study
released Thursday.

"There are problems down the road for Texas," said John Martin, research
director for the Center for Immigration Studies, an advocate of tighter
immigration controls.

Texas' education, transportation and health-care systems will feel pressure
from the increased population at a time when state resources could
diminish, Mr. Martin said.

An immigrant advocate, however, said the study appears to overstate the
potential for Texas population growth. The state, for one, drew large
numbers of Central American immigrants because of political turmoil in
their countries, and those rates have fallen in recent years, said Charlotte
McCann with the United Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights in
Austin.

The study also cites the larger families of immigrants as a continued source
of population growth. That's been true traditionally for first-generation
immigrants, but family sizes quickly fall, Ms. McCann said.

Immigrant families also have a larger percentage of workers, a reflection of
the American tradition of immigrants striving to get ahead, said Luis
Plascencia with the Tomas Rivera Center in Austin, a group that studies
Hispanic issues.

Texas grew more rapidly than the rest of the country from 1970 to 1995,
partly because of migration from other states and partly because of a high
level of immigration, the center said in its study. While the United States
grew 30 percent to 263 million people in the past 25 years, Texas grew 65
percent to 18.5 million.

The state's foreign-born population, however, grew at nearly four times
the national rate during the same period, the study said.

>From 1970 to 1990, the growth of foreign-born immigrants to Texas
accounted for nearly 20 percent of the state's burgeoning population
growth, according to the center's study.

The immigrant influx also has shifted increasingly from European countries
to Mexico and Central America during that period, with added numbers
from Asia. The state's Asian and Hispanic populations have both more than
doubled in the past 25 years, the study said.

In several large Texas cities, including Houston and San Antonio, ethnic
minorities outnumber whites, Mr. Martin said. "That process of
demographic change is continuing and will continue indefinitely," he said.

Immigration threatens to add to the gap between the state's poor and its
wealthy because many of the immigrants arrive with low work skills, Mr.
Martin said.

But immigration can't be viewed as the cause of poverty in Texas, said Mr.
Plascencia at the Tomas Rivera Center.

Immigrants don't go to the Rio Grande Valley in South Texas, the state's
poorest area, he said. "They've gone to the cities, which have been the
state's wealthiest areas," Mr. Plascencia said.

* * *

Forthcoming transformation of Texas?
By Cord Meyer (columnist)
The Washington Times, May 26, 1995

Two population experts at the Center for Immigration Studies in D.C., Leon
F. Bouvier and John L. Martin have just published a fascinating study on
the consequences for Texas of the growth of its immigrant population. It
demonstrates the pace and depth of change in the ethnic distribution of
its population, and shows how massive immigration is transforming the
future that Texans can look forward to.

In effect, a huge foreign migration, largely from Latin America and Asia, has
brought about deep changes in the ethnic composition of the Lone Star
State. For example, the Hispanic population has more than doubled to 4.3
million in 1990, and the Hispanic share of the population has increased
from 18.4 percent in 1970 to 25.5 percent in 1990 — and is even higher
today. Similarly, from a minority of 50,000 in 1970, the Asian immigrant
population grew to 379,000 in 1990, distributed among 69,634 Vietnamese,
63,232 Chinese, 55,795 Indians and 31,775 Koreans.

Although there has been some increase in the native black population of
the United States, their share of the total has fallen from 12.5 percent in
1970 to 11.6 percent in 1990 because of the greater increase in the
number of other minorities. As a consequence of the continued high level
of immigration, the white, non-Hispanic majority has been reduced from
68.7 percent in 1970 to 65.7 percent in 1980, to 60.6 percent in 1990 - and
to below 60 percent today.

Among Texas cities, El Paso has become about 70 percent Hispanic, and
Houston, with only 37,501 foreign-born residents in 1970, came in 1990 to
have a 58 percent foreign- born population, of which 132,596 were
Mexican. By 1990, the white share of Houston's population was down to
40.3 percent. One result was that by 1990, fewer than 70 percent of the
Houston population aged 5 and over spoke English at home. One-quarter
spoke Spanish, and 125,000 citizens of Houston admitted that they either
did not speak English at all or spoke it "not very well."

As the two population experts point out, "The demographic dice may well
be already cast," and unless effective efforts to control immigration and to
reduce birth rates are undertaken soon, "Texas is destined to grow rapidly
into the foreseeable future." Based on current momentum, more than 20
million Texans are foreseen for the turn of the century, and 30 million is
"not an unreasonable estimate" for how many people will live in Texas in
2020.

While the white population of Texas will increase from 10.3 million in 1990
to 12.7 million In 2020, the Hispanic population will increase from 4.3 million
to more than 10 million — and the Asian population will increase to more
than 1.2 million.

This enormous growth of a diverse Texas population from 11 million to
possibly 27 million within a period of 50 years poses a formidable challenge
to even the most self- confident Texas politician. Mr. Bouvier and Mr.
Martin point out that by 2020, nearly 5.6 million children will be in the
public elementary and secondary schools of Texas, compared to 3.5 million
today. It is estimated that Texas will have to build two schools every week
for the next 25 years just to keep up with rising enrollments.

In 1982, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Plyer vs. Dole that Texas schools
must educate all children between the ages of 5 and 17 living within a
school district, regardless of immigration status. With blacks and Hispanics
scoring behind whites in mathematical and reading skills, much work and
resources will be required if parity among ethnic groups is to be attained.
Moreover, additional expensive bilingual educational programs will be
required. As Messrs. Martin and Bouvier point out, the competitiveness of
the Texas work force of the 21st century will be determined by the
language training provided by its schools.

As a result of immigration and population growth, the number of registered
vehicles in Texas will approach 23 million in 2020, compared to 14.5 million
in 1990. This will require an additional 100,000 lane-miles of Texas state
highways to provide for an additional 8.5 million vehicles.

Then there is the fiscal impact of immigration. Because elderly recent
immigrants have never worked in the United States to qualify for Social
Security benefits, they become heavy beneficiaries of the Supplemental
Security Income (SSI) program, and ingenious scams have been devised to
exploit this program. Then there is also the net drain on the state's budget
of programs to control illegal immigration and assist refugees.

There are strict limits on what Texas can do to protect itself against rising
immigration pressure. It is dependent on the Clinton administration and
Congress for the measures necessary to expand the Border Patrol and to
reduce the rate of legal immigration. It must wait for the president to
strengthen the Immigration and Naturalization Service and to bring
effective influence to bear on Mexico to control its porous border. Until
these necessary measures are taken, Texas and the other border states
will live under the threat of an expanding world population.
Forwarded for your information.  The text and intent of the article
have to stand on their own merits.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material
is distributed without charge or profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of information
for non-profit research and educational purposes only.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Then accept it and live up to it." The Buddha on Belief,
from the Kalama Sutra

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