4 - While at any given point in time, there are millions of illegals in the United States, studies done here in California found that twenty years after arrival, roughly 2 percent are still living here. The rest have gone back home with the money they earned.
Source?
Not in SoCal.
It also should be noted that:
(Source: Public Policy Institute of California, JUNE 2008
CALIFORNIA IS HOME TO SEVERAL MILLION UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANTS.
Although estimates of the undocumented immigrant population are imprecise, the best estimates suggest that California was home to about 2.8 million illegal immigrants in 2006. One‐fourth of the nation?s undocumented immigrants reside in California (about twice the state?s share of the nation?s overall population). In California and Arizona, undocumented immigrants constitute about 8% of the population, the highest concentration of illegal immigrants in the United States. However, most immigrants in California (about 70%) are either naturalized citizens or have visas.
(Note - Of these about 56,600 will eventually stay in California. Roughly that amounts to 1.13 million over twenty years. With dependents, it covers quite a few people regardless)
THE POPULATION OF ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS HAS GROWN RAPIDLY IN THE NATION ?
Over the past ten years, the number of undocumented immigrants in the nation has more than doubled, from about 5 million in 1996 to 11.6 million in 2006. During this period, the population of illegal immigrants has grown by more than 500,000 per year, accounting for 19% of the nation?s overall population growth.
? BUT GROWTH HAS SLOWED IN CALIFORNIA.
Recent estimates suggest that California?s undocumented immigrant population is increasing by about 50,000 per year compared to about 100,000 per year in the 1990s. Between 2000 and 2006, the illegal immigrant population grew 13% in California, less than one‐third the rate of growth in the rest of the nation. During this period, undocumented immigration has accounted for only 10% of the state?s overall population growth.
MOST UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANTS ARE FROM LATIN AMERICA.
In California, nine of every ten undocumented immigrants are from Latin America ─ over half (65%) are from Mexico alone. Most of the remainder are from Asia, but even Europe is the origin of tens of thousands of illegal immigrants in California.
ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS OFTEN LIVE IN FAMILIES WITH LEGAL U.S. RESIDENTS.
Men make up the majority of undocumented immigrants (54%). Most illegal immigrants (77%) live with family members, many of whom have legal status (typically, children born in the United States). Many undocumented immigrants eventually legalize their status.
ABOUT ONE IN ELEVEN WORKERS IN CALIFORNIA IS AN UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANT.
Undocumented immigrants tend to have low levels of education and thus work in low‐skill jobs. Although a majority of farm workers in California are illegal immigrants, most undocumented immigrants work in urban areas. In 2004, the leading industries of employment for illegal immigrants were manufacturing and leisure & hospitality.
MOST CALIFORNIANS FAVOR SOME FORM OF LEGALIZATION.
Two‐thirds of California adults think that illegal immigrants should be allowed to apply for work permits that would let them stay and work in the United States. An even larger majority (72%) think most illegal immigrants who have lived and worked in the United States for at least two years should be given a chance to keep their jobs and apply for legal status, while one‐quarter (25%) of Californians believe that these immigrants should be deported.
Note: No representative national or state surveys provide an accurate direct count of undocumented immigrants and their characteristics. The most credible estimates use a residual technique in which undocumented immigrant populations are estimated based on subtracting estimates of legal immigrants from estimates of all immigrants.
Sources: Pew Hispanic Center. Department of Homeland Security. National Agricultural Workers Survey. U.S. Census Bureau. Urban Institute. PPIC Statewide Survey, March 2008.