Dallas Morning News: “Here’s what immigrants contribute to your congressional district”

A new tool developed by New American Economy, a bipartisan research and advocacy organization supporting immigration policies that help grow the US economy, shows that immigrants are contributing billions of dollars in taxes and spending power to congressional districts across the United States. Andrew Lim, New American Economy’s director of quantitative research, said that he hopes that breaking down this data in this way makes it useful for representatives to understand their districts. “This is data that is tailored to their districts, which we know vary greatly from city and county boundaries,” Lim said.

New American Economy used American Community Survey data from the US Census Bureau through 2017 and examined spending and voting power for immigrants and also examined other factors, including home ownership, taxes paid, and the number of immigrant entrepreneurs in each district. Anyone can easily use the tool to look up information on districts or on a state-wide level. In New York District 12, for example, where our firm is located, the tool shows that immigrants make up 26.5% of the population, have paid $4.6B in taxes, and have a spending power of $10.4 billion. Other states, including Texas, also boost high numbers as well. The tool shows that state-wide in Texas immigrants make up about 17% percent of the population, have paid about $35 billion in taxes, and have a spending power of $109.9 billion. “The idea is to show that immigrants at the most familiar level are making giant contributions,” Lim said. “This data tells the story of how immigrants are living and that the conversation around immigration isn’t an abstract but is relevant to our everyday lives.”

The Washington Post: “A renowned scientist wants to thank the stranger who helped him stay in America”  

Mahmoud Ghannoum, a prominent scientist and the director of the Center for Medical Mycology at Case Western Reserve University and the leading microbiome gut researcher in the world, wants to thank a generous travel agent who was instrumental in helping him immigrate to America almost thirty years ago. It was 1990, and Ghannoum’s country, Kuwait, had just been invaded by Saddam Hussein. With his family staying in a dorm room in England, and his town in Kuwait destroyed and financial assets frozen, Ghannoum traveled to Washington, D.C. for a conference where he had planned to speak. He believed his best chance for establishing a new life was in America, and he hoped to find a job through the conference. But the scientists there told him it was the wrong conference for job hunting, and if he could wait in D.C. for one week, he’d likely get a job at another conference.

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Elite Daily: “‘OITNB’ Star Laura Gómez Tells Real-Life Immigrants’ Stories On-Screen & Off"

At the end of season 6 of the hit show Orange Is the New Black, Laura Gómez’s character, Bianca Flores, was transferred from Litchfield Penitentiary to an Immigration & Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center, and in season 7, the show dealt with her experience in detention. "I felt, in a way, it was an interesting way of working around my anxieties at the moment," Gómez, herself an immigrant from the Dominican Republic, said to Elite Daily. “This is affecting us one way or another. I thought it was a wonderful way for me to canonize all this and to find a place to put it. And we all knew we had a big responsibility.”

Inspired in part by her work on Orange is the New Black, Gómez wanted to highlight the experiences and accomplishments of real-life immigrants. Under the hashtag #ImmigrantStoriesByLauraGomez, Gómez has profiled actors, LGBTQ activists, novelists, musicians, entrepreneurs, and young students. "I just had a feeling that this was a way to use my platform, which has been amplified by this show to comment on positive aspects of immigrants, the way I know it, the way I experience it," Gómez said. "I felt this could be my way of humanizing us and giving a little profile of a journey of an immigrant and a positive impact in American society."