U.S. need for bilingual speakers lures
Puerto Ricans
Posted 10/27/2006 12:42 PM ET E-mail | Save | Print | Subscribe to
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SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) Police officers to Baltimore.
Nurses to Florida. Teachers to Las Vegas.
Spanish-speaking professionals and other skilled workers are flocking
to the mainland from this U.S. Caribbean territory, lured by better-paying
jobs and depriving Puerto Rico of those with the most-needed skills,
including doctors.
Puerto Rico has long provided a labor force for the United States,
starting in the early 1900s with those who left to work on sugar
and pineapple plantations in Hawaii.
But today, the outflow includes professionals recruited by U.S.
organizations seeking to meet the growing demand for skilled bilingual
workers.
"The migration is no longer a migration of poor peasants going
to New York to pick apples," said Eduardo Bhatia Gautier, executive
director of the Puerto Rico Federal Affairs Administration. "It's
mostly professional nurses, policemen, doctors, teachers
and other service-related professionals with their families."
Puerto Ricans have U.S. citizenship and about 1,000 from the island
move to the United States every week, mostly to central Florida,
according to Bhatia's agency.
Dr. Marissel Velazquez Vicente, president of the Physicians College
of Puerto Rico, attributes the talent flight to the growing Latino
population in the U.S. mainland.
"Because of the growth of the Hispanic population in the United
States, they are lacking (bilingual) doctors in different fields,
so they are actively recruiting doctors from the island," said
Velazquez, adding that some Puerto Rican hospitals are desperately
short of surgeons as a result.
Ten percent of Puerto Rico's 9,000 doctors registered with the
Physicians College a professional group are working
in the U.S., as well as at least 5% of the 1,500 dentists who are
members of the Dentists College, health officials said.
"This is going to get worse, unless we do something now,"
said Dr. Cesar Garcia Aguirre, president of the dentists' group.
In recent months, recruiting drives have been held by the Baltimore
police, New York City schools, a Florida hospital and the Defense
Department's civil service. Salaries in the United States can be
at least double those in Puerto Rico.
Many nurses who complete their studies in Puerto Rico obtain contracts
for jobs on the U.S. mainland without having ever worked on the
island, said Delia Morales, head of the College of Nursing Professionals
of Puerto Rico.
Engineering students at the University of Puerto Rico's Mayaguez
campus have long been recruited by NASA and top corporations, said
Nancy Nieves, the school's placement director.
In Puerto Rico, those graduates would likely get lower-paying jobs.
The island's economy is stagnant. In May, the local government announced
it had run out of money to pay civil servants and could only keep
emergency agencies running, such as the police. More than 100,000
government workers were laid off for a few weeks.
The fiscal crisis was a windfall for the Baltimore police's recruitment
drive for bilingual officers in July. The department expected only
100 people to try out, but nearly 900 showed up, many fearing another
government shutdown, said Baltimore Police Sgt. Rufino Garcia.
So far, Baltimore has hired 31 Puerto Ricans and is looking for
more, Garcia said in a telephone interview from Baltimore.
Angel Santana, a 28-year veteran of the U.S. military, accepted
a job offer with the Baltimore police after he was forced to take
a 50% cut in his salary with a local freight transportation company.
The company had lost business because of the temporary government
shutdown.
Santana is not sure if he will return to live in Puerto Rico. Two
of his sons already live and work in the United States.
"I think I am starting a new life," the 50-year-old said.
Puerto Rican officials say there is little they can do to stop
the brain drain.
"We're trying very hard to create jobs and increase the wages
in Puerto Rico, but we can't do anything if a professional decides
they want to relocate," Bhatia said. "We do have a bilingual
educated community, and money talks."
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