Current:Home > reviewsLanguage barriers and lack of money is a matter of life and death with Milton approaching Florida -WealthSphere Pro
Language barriers and lack of money is a matter of life and death with Milton approaching Florida
View
Date:2025-04-26 13:16:45
Stay up to date: Follow AP’s live coverage of Hurricane Milton and the 2024 hurricane season.
MIAMI (AP) — Hurricane Milton is expected to unleash its greatest force over hundreds of thousands of immigrants who don’t speak English, most of them Latin Americans harvesting oranges and tomatoes in the fields along Florida’s I-4 corridor, washing dishes in restaurants, cleaning hotel rooms and working construction.
For the Spanish speakers and a smaller number of African refugees , new lives in the U.S. were already a daily struggle because of the language barrier and lack of resources.
Milton has turned those obstacles into a matter of life and death.
Florida is home to at least 4.8 million immigrants, according to the Pew Research Center. After Miami, Orlando and Tampa are the metropolitan areas with the highest number of immigrants, the majority coming from Latin American countries such as Mexico and Venezuela.
In Central Florida, most of migrants work in the hospitality industry, construction and in fields of strawberries, berries, tomatoes and oranges. Some new arrivals don’t have access to TV, others don’t have computers or internet access. There were people who do not know where to find information about Milton, a powerful storm that pushed state and local authorities to order evacuation in the areas where most of these immigrants live.
Immigration advocates and consulate officials have been reaching out to them in Tampa, Orlando and central Florida towns to help with evacuation plans and otherwise prepare. They are sharing information in Spanish, French and African languages and making calls, sending text messages and sharing social media posts with information about shelters, evacuations and places to pick up sandbags, food, water, shelters and gasoline.
“In situations like a hurricane that are emergencies, it is not easy to find information in Spanish,” said Jessica Ramirez, general coordinator at the Farmworker Association, which serves more than 10,000 immigrants.
Nongovernmental organizations such as the Farmworker Association of Florida, the Florida Immigrant Coalition and Hope CommUnity Center have been translating information from state and local authorities and sharing it in Spanish through WhatsApp groups, Facebook, and social-media channels.
Like other organizations that serve low-income Latino families in the area, they have received hundreds of calls from Spanish speaking immigrants who cannot find information in their language and don’t understand English, asking for details about the storm.
Here’s what to know:
- Evacuations: Fifteen Florida counties, home to more than 7.2 million people, were under mandatory evacuation orders as of Wednesday morning. Officials are warning residents not to bank on the storm weakening.
- Landfall: Milton is expected to make landfall on the west coast of Florida late Wednesday as a Category 3 storm.
- Path: The storm is forecast to cross central Florida and to dump as much as 18 inches of rain while heading toward the Atlantic Ocean.
Lupita Lara, a Mexican mother that lives close to Orlando with her family, has a 23-year-old son with special needs who needs a respirator to sleep every night. She tried to submit an online application to request space at a special-needs shelter, but she had technical difficulties and after three hours she decided to call the Farmworker Association.
“I needed their help,” said Lara, 47, who speaks mainly Spanish and needed someone who spoke English to call the shelter’s office. “They don’t have people who speak Spanish when we call,” she said, talking about some of the offices in Orange County.
An advocate from the Farmworker Association made a three-way call and helped translate the conversation. The shelter’s office confirmed that they had received her request but told her that she does not have any space guaranteed, said Lara. She now needs to go to one of the shelters and see if they have space.
“The problem is that people are afraid to call the authorities, so they call us,” said Felipe Souza-Lazaballet, executive director at Hope CommUnity Center. “That’s why we are essentially coordinating all of this information.”
Advocates told the AP that other challenges that they see are lack of economic resources to buy food, water or supplies and fear among the undocumented population.
Some said that many immigrants in the area fear deportation and think that if they go to a shelter or request sandbags, they might be asked to show an ID. They also fear that if they evacuate and move to another state, they will not be able to come back because a new Florida immigration law imposed penalties for those transporting immigrants without legal authorization.
“There is a lot of fear of deportation or worse that people live daily so these fears are highlighted in times of disasters when vulnerability is increased,” said Dominique O’Connor, a climate-justice organizer at the Farmworker Association of Florida.
O’Connor said that some shelters and sites that provide sandbags ask for a form of identification and the military personnel or police officers giving out water are “very intimidating” for immigrants who do not have legal authorization in Florida, which has one of the strictest immigration laws in the country.
—-
veryGood! (43455)
Related
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Authors sue Claude AI chatbot creator Anthropic for copyright infringement
- Mamie Laverock Leaves Hospital 3 Months After Falling Off Five-Story Balcony
- Body cam video shows fatal Fort Lee police shooting unfolded in seconds
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Panama deports 29 Colombians on first US-funded flight
- You'll Be Crazy in Love With Beyoncé and Jay-Z's Rare Outing in New York City
- Alain Delon, French icon dubbed 'the male Brigitte Bardot,' dies at 88
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Woman who faced eviction over 3 emotional support parrots wins $165,000 in federal case
Ranking
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Alain Delon, French icon dubbed 'the male Brigitte Bardot,' dies at 88
- Why Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy told players' agents to stop 'asking for more money'
- 1,600 gallons of firefighting chemicals containing PFAS are released in Maine
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- After $615 Million and 16 Months of Tunneling, Alexandria, Virginia, Is Close to Fixing Its Sewage Overflow Problem
- Periods don’t have to be painful. Here’s how to find relief from menstrual cramps.
- A West Texas ranch and resort will limit water to residents amid fears its wells will run dry
Recommendation
Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
Boston duck boat captains rescue toddler and father from Charles River
Boy Meets World Star Danielle Fishel Shares Breast Cancer Diagnosis
Pioneering daytime TV host Phil Donahue dies at 88
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Raiders go with Gardner Minshew over Aidan O'Connell as starting quarterback
DNC comes to 'Little Palestine' as Gaza deaths top 40,000
Activist paralyzed from neck down fights government, strengthens disability rights for all