‘Quiet Place’ in Pennsylvania Is Thrust Into Loud Immigration Debate

By The New York Times (U.S.) | Created at 2024-09-27 18:41:31 | Updated at 2024-09-30 05:19:56 2 days ago
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U.S.|‘Quiet Place’ in Pennsylvania Is Thrust Into Loud Immigration Debate

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/27/us/charleroi-pennsylvania-haitian-migrants.html

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Former President Donald J. Trump turned his sights on Charleroi, Pa., where many Haitians have settled in recent years, and he fueled a fire that was already smoldering.

An American flag, out of focus, hangs in front of a view of houses and commercial buildings dotting a hillside.
Charleroi, Pa., along the Monongahela River, was once a hub of glassmaking, but manufacturing work has declined in the town.Credit...Michael Swensen for The New York Times

Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs

Sept. 27, 2024, 2:34 p.m. ET

Amos Vougar felt as though he had found just about everything he needed when he arrived in the small Pennsylvania town of Charleroi. The people were welcoming, the rent was cheap, and he soon moved up the job ranks at a food processing plant, allowing him to send money to his wife and children back in Liberia.

Three years later, things now feel drastically different.

A rapid influx of immigrants like Mr. Vougar into Charleroi over the past two years, many of them fleeing violence in Haiti, has led to the kind of discord now being seen in towns across the country that for years were relatively untouched by immigration. Former President Donald J. Trump fanned the flames this month, claiming that immigrants had brought “massive crime” to Charleroi and asking: “Has your beautiful town changed?”

To Mr. Vougar, the sudden flood of gripes, fears and rumors from longtime residents has threatened the serene life he thought he had found in the green hills of Charleroi, which lies along a winding river an hour south of Pittsburgh.

“Things changed greatly,” Mr. Vougar said this week. “All the immigrants in the Charleroi community right now are living in fear.”

He found himself growing upset recently when a cashier at a store dismissively assumed that he did not know English.

Once a glass manufacturing hub, Charleroi had been shrinking for years, as residents watched one employer after another pack up and leave, so Mr. Vougar thought the arrival of immigrants like him would be seen as a boon to the town.


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