http://www.azcentral.com/families/education/articles/0726english.html#
 
Immigrants jam English classes Adults wait in line as lawmakers push for
official language

Daniel González
The Arizona Republic
Jul. 26, 2005 12:00 AM
As momentum grows to make English the official language in Arizona and
across the country, immigrants are having a hard time getting into English
classes.

At adult education programs throughout the state, the demand for English
classes is so great that immigrants often wait months, and sometimes more
than a year and a half, to get in. The long waits hurt immigrants' ability
to get jobs and help their children in school.

Still, the state Legislature has tried to cut funding for adult education in
recent years but pushed to declare English the official language of Arizona
to encourage immigrants to learn it. 

"People are not dumb. They understand that in order to improve (in this
country) you have to speak English," said Luis Enriquez, director of adult
education and workforce development at Friendly House. 

This summer, 283 people are enrolled in eight English classes at the Phoenix
non-profit organization, Enriquez said. An additional 213 people are on a
waiting list to get in.

Next month, when the school year begins, the agency will add 13 more English
classes at five school districts around the Valley, enough to serve an
additional 2,600 people.

Six hundred people are studying English this summer through classes offered
by the Literacy Volunteers of Maricopa County. About 100 more people are on
a waiting list.

Demand for English classes is even higher during the rest of the year, said
Margaret Quintana, the agency's learning center director. At times, the
agency has had as many as 500 people waiting to get into an English class,
Quintana said.

"It's easy to live your life in Arizona in Spanish, but to really succeed
you need English," Quintana said. Most immigrants understand that, she said.


Statewide, there are 36 adult education programs offering English classes.

A 2004 study by the Arizona Department of Education found that 5,009 adults
were on a waiting list to get into English classes and that an additional
5,686 were turned away. Statewide, about 18,000 adults who wanted to learn
English enrolled in classes through adult education programs.

The study identified 445,000 adults, without high school diplomas, who
didn't speak English very well, the target population for English classes.

"One of my goals has been to reduce the waiting lists," state schools
Superintendent Tom Horne said. "If people are desirous of learning English,
they should start right away. They shouldn't have to wait. It hampers people
in the job market, and (it) hampers their ability to help their children in
school."

Horne said that for two years in a row he fought off efforts by the
Legislature to reduce the $3 million the state spends on English and adult
literacy classes. The state also receives about $9 million from the federal
government to pay for English classes, he said.

Next year, he plans to ask for more money to fund English classes and for
authorization to charge fees. 

One recent morning, 21 immigrants - 19 women and two men - sat in a
classroom at Friendly House near downtown Phoenix finishing an English exam
to measure how much they had improved over the past three months. The
immigrants were from Mexico, Honduras, El Salvador and Cuba. They spend
three hours a day learning English, Monday through Thursday. The classes are
free. 

Many said they had lived in the United States for years and only now were
getting around to learning English.

"When they first come, it's survival, feeding their families. Once they have
some stability, they say, 'OK, now I have some time to learn English,' "
said Enriquez, the adult education director.

Phoenix resident Olga Torres, 68, an immigrant from Mexico, said she waited
for two months until she got into an English class in September. 

Despite living in the United States for 35 years, she never learned English
very well. But it wasn't for a lack of desire. 

"My husband died in 1976. I had five children. I had to work to support
them, and I didn't have time to go to school," Torres said. 

She said she was trying to learn English now so she could communicate better
with her grandchildren.

Glendale resident Juana Vazquez, 35, an immigrant from Cuba, began taking
English classes three months ago. She juggles the classes between work and
raising a family. Vazquez, who owns a housekeeping franchise, is at her job
by 4 a.m. After rushing home to feed her two children, ages 12 and 6, she is
at class by 9 a.m. When class ends at noon, she goes home for a few hours
and then is back at work until 10 or 10:30 p.m. 

She hopes learning English will lead to a job that pays better.

"If you come here, you need to learn English because this is not our
country," Vazquez said.

Phoenix resident Jorge Noriega, 24, who was born in Texas but grew up in
Mexico, also hopes learning English will help him find a better job. He
enrolled in an English class at the end of June. He already speaks English
well, but now he is trying to learn how to read and write better. After the
English class is finished, he stays for a two-hour class to help him get his
high school equivalency diploma. 

"I want to improve myself," Noriega said. "If you don't know English, then
you miss out on opportunities." 

A bill is pending in Congress to make English the official language of the
United States. U.S. Reps. J.D. Hayworth and Trent Franks, both Arizona
Republicans, are among the 126 co-sponsors. 

Twenty-seven states already have made English the official language, said
Rob Toonkel, director of communications and research for U.S. English Inc.,
a Washington, D.C.-based organization that promotes making English the
nation's official language. 

Some state lawmakers also are pushing to make English the official language
in Arizona. The Legislature passed an official-English bill earlier this
year that would have banned the translation of government documents into
languages other than English, except those needed for international trade,
tourism and to protect the public's health and safety.

Gov. Janet Napolitano vetoed the bill, saying she agreed non-English
speakers should be encouraged to learn English, but the bill included no
money to help them do that. 

Toonkel said one of the goals of making English the official language is to
generate more funding for English classes.

"It's our hope that these types of bills go together, that once you make
English the official language, you also give immigrants the opportunity to
learn English," Toonkel said.

But Raul Gonzalez, legislative director for the National Council of La Raza,
a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy organization, said making English the
official language isn't necessary. 

"It's a specious argument," Gonzalez said. "It's based on the argument that
what's stopping people from learning English is because we don't have
English as the official language. . . . There are insufficient resources for
people to learn English. That's the problem."





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