The United States is a country full of immigrants and those who are born overseas, however; upon moving to the "home of the free," they should learn how to speak English. There are second and third generation immigrants who do not speak English at all. Approximately 13.8 percent of residents speak a language other than English at home. An alarming 2.9 percent (equivalent to 6.7 million people) did not speak English at all. Learning English opens a variety of doors and is the key to success in the country. Speaking English is critical, however; according to the 2000 Census, 21.3 million (or 8.1 percent) of residents spoke English "less than well." (Facts & Figures).
Those residents in America who do not speak English at all increased dramatically from 1.22 million residents in 1980 to 3.37 million residents in 2000. Unfortunately California leads the number of people who cannot speak English well by 6.3 million residents, a whopping one-fifth of the entire state. In contrast, the residents who cannot speak English well have merely doubled, in 1980 there were 10.2 million people who did not speak English well. This is compared to 21.3 million people in the 2000 Census. In 1980 approximately 1 and 20 Americans did not speak English well, compared to the 2000 Census which shows 1 and 12 Americans did not speak English well. Currently one fourth of the households in the United States are "linguistically isolated" in which 11.9 residents speak a language other than English in their home. Currently, in the United States, residents speak over 300 languages. English is by far the most common, with Spanish, French, Chinese, and German being the most popular besides English. In California alone residents speak over 200 languages at home with states such as New York and Washington coming in close. Surprisingly over 80 percent of immigrants speak English "very well", but the numbers depend on their ancestry. Egyptians are most proficient in speaking English, followed by Lebanese, Pakistanis, and Iranians. Oddly enough only 49.5 percent of Mexicans speak English very well. (Facts & Figures).
In the United States as of 2000, there were 41,601,418 people who did not speak English in their homes, which accounts for 16.3 percent of the population. California accounts for 10,938,446 of those individuals, followed by Texas with 5,424,068 people. Furthermore there were 10,513,832 people who did not speak English well in 2000, accounting for 4.3 percent of the population. From 1990 to 2000 there was a 57.6 percent increase in the number of people who do not speak English well. (Facts & Figures).
In California one tenth of its population does not speak English at all or very poorly. Approximately one million of those aforementioned over the age of 14 do not speak English at all in the home. Approximately 39.5 percent of California residents over the age of 18 speak a language other than English in their homes. California currently has 5,917,071 residents who only speak Spanish, and have 696, 387 residents who only speak Chinese. (English on Decline in USA).
Many immigrants come to the United States in hopes of making money for their families and providing them with a better life. Some of the popular immigrant jobs require little to no English proficiency, including factory and field workers. Employers cater to the needs of immigrants by providing them with instructions in both English and Spanish. Many employers do not want the workers to learn English. With learning English comes great enlightenment. Workers would be able to see how poorly their accommodations are. Compare the wages of immigrant workers who know little to no English, and those who are highly proficient. The immigrant who speaks English very well will earn $40,741 compared to $16,345 that the non-English speaking worker would earn. Immigrants who knew some English, but were not proficient, still made half as much as the worker who knew no English at all. (Facts & Figures).
Those immigrants who could not speak English at all, or poorly, earned 57 percent less than what a native born person would earn. Those immigrants who choose to speak English at work, but a different language a home, account for 90 percent of the above native born people. Coincidently, those immigrants who are fluent in English will earn 20 percent more than the average native born workers. According to the U.S. Department of Education, those who are not proficient in English are more likely to fail in society. These people are less likely to be employed and tend to work seasonal and labor intensive jobs. They tend to do the jobs that Americans, or English proficient immigrants, choose not to do. (Facts & Figures).
As the United States faces the biggest budget crisis in the history of the nation, luxury expenses such as producing government documents in multiple languages should be, and can, be eliminated. Since English is not our official language, the government must make documents in every language to accommodate the needs of its people. This includes translation services, signs, ballots, and other documents. Canada has two official languages: English and French, therefore their governments are required to reproduce documents in those languages. Their government spends $260 million each year to conduct affairs in both languages and accounts for less than one percent of their annual budget. In terms of the United States, if they were to use the same percentage of the budget, expenses would account for $3.8 billion. This is $3.8 billion that could be put into the school system. Furthermore, the Canadian government spends approximately $24 per person in language expenses, if the United States were to do this it would be approximately $5.7 billion. (Costs of Multilingualism).
The cost of language translation has affected countries in the European Union, which includes 25 countries and 20 languages. The documents in the union have to be translated into 380 different languages. Governments within the union must limit their documents to fifteen pages or less to lower translation fees. Translators in the union account for eight percent of the entire staff with 1,800 people. The annual cost for translation services was $1.6 billion. In Los Angeles, it costs $2 billion, one eighth of the city's election budget, to print ballots in both English and Spanish. In San Francisco the city must spend $350,000 per year to translate documents, which is mandated under the city's bilingual government ordinance. The California Department of Motor Vehicles spends $2.2 million annually to provide service in multiple languages. The major immigrant department, the Immigration and Naturalization Service, spends up to $115 million each year to cater to multiple languages. It costs $1.86 million to provide written language translations to food stamp recipients. Oral translation cost approximately $20 million each year. (Costs of Multilingualism).
Hospitals and medical centers currently staff tons of full time and on call interpreters. Many doctors are also practicing in other languages than English. For example, in the Alameda Medical Center employs eighteen full time translators and has nineteen on call translators. This costs the county approximately $1 million. Speaking English and having health insurance are correlated, as 22 percent of the non-English speaking patients do not have insurance, 66 percent of those non-English speaking patients are on Medi-Cal or Medicare. Less than five percent of those who do not know English have insurance. The hospital only gets a fraction of the cost of the appointment from Medi-Cal. Hospitals which do not employ interpreters can expect to pay up to $130 per hour for consultants. Physicians have the right to provide services only in English, however; if it is a state or government ran program they must provide outpatient service in multiple languages, which costs $186 million per year. To provide language services to patients in the hospital costs $78.2 million. Emergency room visit translation services cost approximately $8.6 million per year, making the total for the healthcare sector $267.6 million. Those who do not speak English are a nuisance to our economy. The hospital is only reimbursed by Medi-Cal and Medicare for part of the translation services. Often times a doctor is going to pay $500 per visit out of pocket. (Costs of Multilingualism).
As a nation we spend entirely too much money on language services within the educational sector. To provide bilingual education we spend over $665 million dollars. While Michael Bloomberg was running for mayor, he promised to provide students in the New York school system the ability to take classes in their native language for a price of only $20 million per year. According to the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences, more than $100 million has been spent over the past thirty years to evaluate the benefits of bilingual education. The study found that programs such as Bloomberg's native language instruction provide little to no benefit. The findings provide evidence that children should begin reading in English first, rather than their native language. In New York, more than 83 percent of students in their English as a Second Language program were not proficient in English after nine years and could not test out of the program to enter mainstream classrooms. In High School the Board of Education discovered that one-third of the English Language Learners dropped out and only 30 percent of the ELL students graduated. (Costs of Multilingualism).
It is a myth that immigrants want to continue to speak their language and not learn English. Most immigrants, if not given the option to receive services or documents in their native language, would learn English much faster. Approximately 79 percent of Americans believe that English should be the official language of the United States. A majority of Americans (96 percent) believe it is essential for immigrants to learn English. On the same terms, 85 percent of Americans believe if the immigrants do not learn English, it will be very difficult for them to get jobs. Two thirds of adults born overseas living in America say that it should be a requirement for immigrants to learn English. Approximately 68 percent of Hispanic adults believe the bilingual program in the educational system needs to focus more on students learning English. With this in mind, three of every four Hispanics believe students should learn English first, and then catch up on other subjects. (Kirkham).
According to a survey conducted by the Luntz Research Company in 1995, 86 percent of the 1,208 respondents said that English should be the official language of the United States. According to a poll conducted by CNN in 1995, 65 percent of respondents said that English should be the official language of the country. According to a poll in 1986 conducted by CBS, 60 percent of respondents indicated that In parts of this country where many people speak a language other than English, state and local governments should only use English. (Kirkham).
In August 2000, before the Clinton Administration left the Whitehouse, the president signed Executive Order 13166. This law was monumental as it said that any organization or company receiving funds from the government must provide documents and services in any language. The law also stated that doctors and hospitals receiving Medicare or Medi-Cal payments must provide translation services to patients. The American Medical Association officially spoke against this law. The only responsibility a doctor has is to deliver the best patient care possible - not cater to their language of choice. (Executive Order 13166).
In the 110th Congress senators created H.R. 997, the English Language Unity Act of 2007. This law states that English is the official language of the United States. The bill claims that having English as the official language would remove any misconceptions or mistranslations in interpreting the laws. The law states that English will be a unifying language bringing all of us together. The law says that the federal government will do more to help people learn English. The law says that the official functions in government will be conducted in English, and includes teaching. There is a uniform rule for naturalization in which all citizens must be more than proficient in English. In 2008 the House of Representatives introduced H.R. 5971, the American Elections Act of 2008. This act states that ballots used in the general elections are generally printed only in English, except for certain districts. California created Proposition 63 in 1986 in which it stated that "English is the common language of the people of the United States of America and the State of California." (Language Legislation in the USA).
There are many benefits to having English as the Official Language of the United States of America. In having only one official language it would remove any confusion in the translating of laws and civil liberties. If there was such a confusion or misconception, the English translation would hold up in the courts. Winston Churchill once said, " The gift of a common tongue is a priceless inheritance." With an official language no citizen has the right, or entitlement, to receive documents in another language other than English. The citizens should be the ones to pay the government for the translation expenses. (Ten Reasons).
We often forget that as a society we were formed by the English, and by English speaking people. Since our constitution was written in English it only makes common sense to adapt an official language law. Currently there are 30 states that have created official English laws, which is a majority. The federal government should do the same. The people overwhelmingly agree that English should be our official language; the government should take this into account. The solution is quite simple, in order for America to unite all of the various races and ethnicities; we must use English as the binding agent. Modern English is created by the numerous cultures and ethnic groups that exist in our country.
Published by Joe Thomas
My name is Jeo Thomas, I am a Freelance Communications Specialist and received by Bachelor of Arts Degree from Sonoma State University. View profile
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13 Comments
Post a Comment...So shouldn't the translation processes provide jobs for people? What a radical idea, to make English the official language. This country is the melting pot of the world, and its foundation was formed from the blood, sweat and tears of immigrants.
You need to list your sources.Nice piece otherwise.
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Wouldn't it take away like all of the peoples rights, if they had no help whatsoever? I mean they really to have to learn english, but it shouldn't override there rights. Don't yah think so?
Were is your work cited page???? You have some really good facts in here but i have no idea were to find them???
WHERE DID U GET ALL OF THESE FACTS AND STATISTICS FROM? WHERE ARE YOUR SOURCES?
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