On Monday, I had all day to investigate Geo Group. Here I will log what I do for my investigative reporting class.
I started out my day by listening to an hour long conference call where Geo Group announced their fourth qaurter earnings. I learned of the many expansions they have planned for this upcoming year and how much they made last year. Which was over a billion dollars by the way. There was also a direct correlation between the more beds eqauling millions of dollars more in profit. At the end of the conference call, a caller asked if the construction in Tacoma had been completed and the chairman said yes it had. This is a lie, because if you go down to the detention center, you will see incomplete side panneling, construction trucks going in and out and cranes within the fencing.
After a call with a local activist, I learned how much they make per detainee per day, which is $60. This activist also reminded me of the food poisoining that occured in 2007 which made 300 people ill. So I got on the phone to the local health department asking if they had given employees (detainees working for a $1 a day) food handlers permits. They had no record of holding a training for them.
The Tacoma News Tribune retrieved the inspection by the health department of the detention center. This article, while a secondary source, provided good information of the food poisoning outbreak.
In the following days, I read the audit by ICE and the One America report of the detention center.
Stories, articles and bits from a Writer in Olympia, Washington. Why a writer's hair clip? Because this is where I can put my writing up, apart from anything else in my life. Views expressed by me may not reflect the organizations I write of.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Reporting on Detention
Today I went down to the Northwest Detention Center that detains over 1500 immigrants and deports over half of the immigrants that come through the center.
I went to collect sources for my investigative report at UWT, during a protest.
I still had my camera, reporters notebook and rain coat, but what I witnessed was completely different. It wasn't a family friendly environment. Families were walking into visit their missing family members and rying to prevent their loved ones from being shipped thousands of miles away.
I talked to an Indonesian Lutheran Pastor who heard about when the NWDC shipped a whole airplane load of Asians out of the country at once, detainees had not signed the voluntary deportation form.
I talked to an activist who was put in jail for being at the center while they would put long term detainee immigrants on bus's and park them in parking lots for a day while they processed immigrants that would be shortly deported.
NWDC makes more profit of long term detainees.
I talked to a One America representative who reminded everyone that coming into the country illegally is a civil offense, not a criminal offense and shouldn't be detained because of it.
This day was very different, then when I took a snapshot of a happy spanish worker at Concrete Tech.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010
The day in the life of a "reporter"!
Wednesday, Feb 10, 2010 9am to 3pm
Today was very exciting.
Concrete Technologies is a company that hires immigrants from Tacoma Community House (TCH) and responsibility (as the Communications Intern for TCH)to highlight them in our upcoming centennial publications. In doing their profile, I interviewed the HR manager, but I also got to take a tour of the company plant.
Concrete Technologies creates giant concrete structures, like bridges, docks, stadiums etc. They are located in the tide flats. Finding them was extremely difficult, because they are really in the heart of the Port of Tacoma (near the water and not near the city center).
With my reporter's notebook, camera, hard hat, glasses and bright vest I felt like a reporter and toured the facility. I met a lot of the workers and saw the interactions. The family owned (third generation immigrants from Norway) business treats their laborers like family and desires only success for them.
When I got back to the office, I wrote up that profile and worked on profiles for other success stories (previous TCH clients). A woman who I did a profile for came into the office to show me pictures of when she was at TCH. You could tell TCH meant a lot to her, because she fondly shared memories with me of how her teachers uplifted her after her self-esteem-busting migration to the states. She told me it was like starting over again. Two pictures she shared with me stuck out in my mind.
One picture is of her family in Austria upset, with all their clothing and cases. Their hotel they were supposed to stay in in Austria was full, so they had to wonder the streets for a few days.
Another picture is of her at Tacoma Community House's summer job smiling with her managers.
Today I learned two things:
1. The importance of the visual elements that show people's faces (working at their job sites, etc) which gives a dynamic story and elements writing can't.
2. The importance of work. The importance of feeling needed, being employed and the importance of company's hiring you and respecting you.
Today was very exciting.
Concrete Technologies is a company that hires immigrants from Tacoma Community House (TCH) and responsibility (as the Communications Intern for TCH)to highlight them in our upcoming centennial publications. In doing their profile, I interviewed the HR manager, but I also got to take a tour of the company plant.
Concrete Technologies creates giant concrete structures, like bridges, docks, stadiums etc. They are located in the tide flats. Finding them was extremely difficult, because they are really in the heart of the Port of Tacoma (near the water and not near the city center).
With my reporter's notebook, camera, hard hat, glasses and bright vest I felt like a reporter and toured the facility. I met a lot of the workers and saw the interactions. The family owned (third generation immigrants from Norway) business treats their laborers like family and desires only success for them.
When I got back to the office, I wrote up that profile and worked on profiles for other success stories (previous TCH clients). A woman who I did a profile for came into the office to show me pictures of when she was at TCH. You could tell TCH meant a lot to her, because she fondly shared memories with me of how her teachers uplifted her after her self-esteem-busting migration to the states. She told me it was like starting over again. Two pictures she shared with me stuck out in my mind.
One picture is of her family in Austria upset, with all their clothing and cases. Their hotel they were supposed to stay in in Austria was full, so they had to wonder the streets for a few days.
Another picture is of her at Tacoma Community House's summer job smiling with her managers.
Today I learned two things:
1. The importance of the visual elements that show people's faces (working at their job sites, etc) which gives a dynamic story and elements writing can't.
2. The importance of work. The importance of feeling needed, being employed and the importance of company's hiring you and respecting you.
Monday, February 8, 2010
Interviewing Activists and Immigrants
Today, I interviewed one of Tacoma's activists against the Northwest Detention Center (NWDC) which has seen the equivalent of the population of Bainbridge Island come through their doors since 2004. 80% of the people that go to the NWDC are deported. Children are left without parents and there is little legal representation for the non-English speakers who are citizens of other countries.
This past month, my eyes have been opened and my time has been consumed with this immigration problem. While working at Tacoma Community House(TCH), I have learned what the troubles of immigrating and what its like to start over new. The joyful smiles of the new citizens and now English speaking immigrants/refugees however, weigh ever so lightly on the unequal scale of unjust (Administration) of deporting immigrants and refugees. Where on the other side there are tears of an activist who has seen young children miss their parents, while parents must leave their children behind and are left with little understanding to what the word deportation means.
What does this mean for me? It means I have an obligation to write about everything I have heard. It means my articles and PR for TCH has a significant place in this community. A community that isn't fully aware of the detention center on tide flats.Through my writing, I hope to establish awareness, pool together people for a common cause and inspire change.
This past month, my eyes have been opened and my time has been consumed with this immigration problem. While working at Tacoma Community House(TCH), I have learned what the troubles of immigrating and what its like to start over new. The joyful smiles of the new citizens and now English speaking immigrants/refugees however, weigh ever so lightly on the unequal scale of unjust (Administration) of deporting immigrants and refugees. Where on the other side there are tears of an activist who has seen young children miss their parents, while parents must leave their children behind and are left with little understanding to what the word deportation means.
What does this mean for me? It means I have an obligation to write about everything I have heard. It means my articles and PR for TCH has a significant place in this community. A community that isn't fully aware of the detention center on tide flats.Through my writing, I hope to establish awareness, pool together people for a common cause and inspire change.
Saturday, April 25, 2009
The band
Ah the amazing piano has struck me again. Andre Watts took my breath away, but the Korean pianist Eun Joo Chung made me swoon... and not over men, but over her music. She has such control over her keys, the contrast from deep dark loud keys to light small mezzo-forte. I saw more percision with her than I did with Watts. He is much more grandiose, whereas she is lighter, but at the same time pulling off every measure with fierce passion. The Rhapsody in Blue peice delighted me, becuase it is a peice with great intros and endings. The subductive claronet high pitched beginning and saxaphone solo, and than the loud resounding tuba bringing about the end. I absolutley enjoyed tonight's concert. Tacoma Concert Band is truly made up of fabulous musicians. It was a pleasure to meet Eun Joo Chung, she suprised me bringing so much to the table. Just one suggestion to the conductor's at The Pantages Theatre, shorten your speeches just a tincy..there redudant and feel belittling. Just let us soak in the music bringing our own imaginations to the concert. Still nothing beats classic American brass and piano.
Friday, March 20, 2009
Treasure hunting in Tacoma=Antiquing
I think of antique collectors as junk lovers. Carrying the weight of all the stuff we don't want anymore and that they have hand picked over for value. Downtown Tacoma, there are a few places I like to go that support these antique collectors. The first one is by Tully's Coffee and next to Broadway and the Pantages Theater. It has a sign out front that says, "We collect old toys" or something to the like of that. Inside is all the wanders of your parent's childhood and some of your own. It's a great place to go shopping for my parent's and my little sister's birthday. Everyone has a hobby or collects something. Well this is the place to find it.
The minute you walk in, you are automatically in shock because every inch of the store is cluttered with little and bit trinkits. There are posters above you advertising a 50's movie. 500 peices of china on shelves in front of you. Books..oh there are always old books and comic books that are colorful and smell like delicacy and tinted with time. I love going to this antique shop because it outdoes Hallmark. This stuff isn't just shipped over from China and into the giant retail store. It is historic, always unique and the graphics/logos/fonts are original of their time, not ours. Items in these stores set themselves apart that way. When you go into an antique shop, you are going to find something you have never seen before but has been around for ages.
The other great benefit to antiquing is the cheapness of it, if your smart. You can find great treasures for a little price. I found an elvis postcard that I mailed to my boyfreind. It was 50 cents. It's 4 dollars to buy a nice hallmark greeting card. There are many expensive antiques which is why I think some people think of antiques of as at a rich man's auction weekend. This is true, there is the antique roadshow where things are priced for the price of people's cars. However, small shops in the downtown Tacoma in Olympia don't charge a whole lot for a treasure you'd love to take home that you've found.
I also found a retro hot topic/metro/spencers antique shop called the What the shop. Most of it was vulgar, sexual and offensive to some degree to me, but it was still interesting to see movie posters, postcards, records, material, costumes and out there stuff from decades to go. A little shop of rebellion is what I call it. She had some new stuff that she charged some now times prices for, but they were scattered in between the collector's edition of John Wayne hard posters.
The last one that I would like to mention, besides Lulu's which is just a fun little girly shop, is the lady with all the old celebrity clothes. In fact, a lot of her clothing is pictured as a version a star wore in a magazine. I love the fur, the velvet hats and pointy tiny shoes. Women were so small back then.I doubt anything but the coats would fit me in that store, but I had fun preening about the color oreinted complete outfits. Not to mention the incredible collection of jewlery. Her prices were up there, but the clothes were of high qaulity and high priced originally.
So if your looking for a cheap way to have fun and treasure hunt for an afternoon. Visit Tacoma's Antique shops. Who knows you may find your next outfit, interior decorations or stationary!
The minute you walk in, you are automatically in shock because every inch of the store is cluttered with little and bit trinkits. There are posters above you advertising a 50's movie. 500 peices of china on shelves in front of you. Books..oh there are always old books and comic books that are colorful and smell like delicacy and tinted with time. I love going to this antique shop because it outdoes Hallmark. This stuff isn't just shipped over from China and into the giant retail store. It is historic, always unique and the graphics/logos/fonts are original of their time, not ours. Items in these stores set themselves apart that way. When you go into an antique shop, you are going to find something you have never seen before but has been around for ages.
The other great benefit to antiquing is the cheapness of it, if your smart. You can find great treasures for a little price. I found an elvis postcard that I mailed to my boyfreind. It was 50 cents. It's 4 dollars to buy a nice hallmark greeting card. There are many expensive antiques which is why I think some people think of antiques of as at a rich man's auction weekend. This is true, there is the antique roadshow where things are priced for the price of people's cars. However, small shops in the downtown Tacoma in Olympia don't charge a whole lot for a treasure you'd love to take home that you've found.
I also found a retro hot topic/metro/spencers antique shop called the What the shop. Most of it was vulgar, sexual and offensive to some degree to me, but it was still interesting to see movie posters, postcards, records, material, costumes and out there stuff from decades to go. A little shop of rebellion is what I call it. She had some new stuff that she charged some now times prices for, but they were scattered in between the collector's edition of John Wayne hard posters.
The last one that I would like to mention, besides Lulu's which is just a fun little girly shop, is the lady with all the old celebrity clothes. In fact, a lot of her clothing is pictured as a version a star wore in a magazine. I love the fur, the velvet hats and pointy tiny shoes. Women were so small back then.I doubt anything but the coats would fit me in that store, but I had fun preening about the color oreinted complete outfits. Not to mention the incredible collection of jewlery. Her prices were up there, but the clothes were of high qaulity and high priced originally.
So if your looking for a cheap way to have fun and treasure hunt for an afternoon. Visit Tacoma's Antique shops. Who knows you may find your next outfit, interior decorations or stationary!
Friday, February 13, 2009
Market Construction?
So the tiny little antique venue where I found Glenna's womens wear, the guy that has all the silver and clocks for sale, the historical exhibit and the antique toy shop are all on this street in the middle of downtown Tacoma that has construction going on.
The owner of the toy antique shop told me that he was closing from Sunday till next Saturday because no one will be able to access his store.
The lady in LuLu's frilly antique shop said they will be closed tomorrow.
I was saddened, but than again if that street is going to be closed than I assume why pay the time to have the shop open. Better get in there today! I got my Valentine's day card and two cute pink skirts from the Second Closet thrift shop on Commerce so I am happy. Still though, I guess you just have to take the positive with the negatives.
The owner of the toy antique shop told me that he was closing from Sunday till next Saturday because no one will be able to access his store.
The lady in LuLu's frilly antique shop said they will be closed tomorrow.
I was saddened, but than again if that street is going to be closed than I assume why pay the time to have the shop open. Better get in there today! I got my Valentine's day card and two cute pink skirts from the Second Closet thrift shop on Commerce so I am happy. Still though, I guess you just have to take the positive with the negatives.
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