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Nogales Trip by
Borderlinks

In my first semester
at ASU I took a class entitled “Latin American Cities”. In this class
we discussed economic, historical, and architectural aspects of South
America. When we were observing the different architectural structures,
we spent some time studying the favalas that the lower class
communities lived in. These, of course, were not beneficial to the
aesthetic environment, but none the less, it was important to see how
this group of people lived. I felt some sympathy for the conditions
that these people endured, but photos cannot compare to the experience
that our Nogales trip gave to me.
The
conditions the residents of Nogales live in are horrific. I'm not
judging these conditions by “American standards”, but rather by human
standards. Lack of clean water, proper sewage, electricity, and
adequate housing are serious health risks to the men, women, and
children that so desperately cling to the U.S.-Mexican border. Not only
do these citizens suffer from the inadequacies of basic needs for
survival, but their only source for substandard income is from
foreign-controlled of factories that add to the destruction and
pollution of the region. According to the Texas Center for Policy
Studies, in 1995 the maquilas were producing 164 tons of
hazardous waste per day. The study further reports that the lack
of treatment plants allows these factories to simply dump this waste
into the desert. An article written by Global Exchange reported
that improper disposal of the chemicals has greatly increased birth
defects and cases of hepatitis. The readings given for
this trip did not supply exact figures of health records or life
expectancy rates for the region, but I am sure these reports are
frightening.
As a history major, I
immediately examined my trip from a historical point of view. I
concluded that Nogales had a strikingly similar resemblance to my
studies of American history. The introduction of heavy industry in the
late 18th and 19th century left many unskilled
workers in America leading similar lives. Recently I read Upton
Sinclair’s, The Jungle. This fictional novel depicts life in
Chicago at the turn of the 20th century. Wages in Chicago
for unskilled labor was no more than a few dollars a day, and living
conditions were perhaps slightly better than those of Nogales.
Rick
Ufford-Chase, director of BorderLinks, stated in “Glimpsing the Future”,
that the standard wages in maquilas is $3.50 per day. These wages are comparable to the United States, from
nearly a century ago! In the 1890s in the U.S. a photo journalist named
Jacob Riis wrote a book entitled, How the Other Half Lives. In
this book, Riis photographed personal accounts of immigrants’ living
conditions in New York. Riis’ book and his photos stirred enough
commotion in New York that the state began to legislate house and
sanitation codes. When I asked Kiko Trijillo, the director for
BorderLinks in Mexico, about what the citizens of Nogales were doing to
change these conditions, he basically said that they were idle in this
matter. Kiko Trijillo stated that most of the 400,000 residents were
first generation migrants who were not interested in changing the
environment. I understand that in American history, it took nearly a
century to create reforms that assisted workers. How long will it take
Mexico?
Mike Mesquita 05/11/05 |