SUNDAY PRICE: $ 1.50
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 2, 20 1 0
FOUNDED IN 1 905
REMEMBERING SEPT. 1 1, 200 1
Covering the scars of 9/11 won’t erase the loss NEW YORK ● It’s Christmas Eve
D AV I D WHITING REGISTER COLUMNIST
2006, and I step into freezing darkness on a balcony high above Ground Zero and wonder what 2,977 people would be doing if they were still alive. Traffic lights wink 32 stories below my sister’s apartment. They match the tiny red and green lights strung across the iron guardrail on the narrow ledge. But, on this night, there is no joy. There is a gaping black hole
in the ground, blackness where the twin towers once sparkled like crystals reaching toward the heavens. In my mind’s eye, I can see the souls floating in front of me, and I realize had they lived, most would be celebrating right now – singing carols or cleaning up after Hanukkah or getting ready for Eid al-Adha, an Islamic holy day. Others S E E W H I T I N G ● PA G E 1 8
● Solemn ceremonies at Ground Zero, the Pentagon and Shanksville, Pa., paid tribute to the victims of the terrorist attacks. News 22-23
Orange County marked the ninth anniversary of the attacks with a remembrance service and a ride featuring more than a thousand motorcycles. Local 1 ●
JASON DECROW, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A firefighter salutes as taps is played for victims of the Sept. 1 1 terrorist attacks during a commemoration ceremony Saturday at Zuccotti Park, adjacent to Ground Zero, in New York.
A N I N V E S T I G AT I O N B Y R O N A L D C A M P B E L L PA R T O N E O F F O U R
CALIFORNIA IS HOME TO 9.8 MILLION IMMIGRANTS. TOGETHER THEY MAKE UP ONE-THIRD OF THE STATE’S WORKERS – MORE THAN ALMOST ANY OTHER DEVELOPED ECONOMY ON THE PLANET. IMMIGRANT WORKERS EARNED $260 BILLION IN 2008. IN SHORT, THIS IS …
A STATE POWERED BY IMMIGRANTS T
oday, half of California’s software developers, one-third of its nurses and a quarter of its CEOs are immigrants. So are most of its housekeepers, cooks and gardeners. Most of them are here legally, the
product of the largest wave of legal immigration in a century. Long after residents of other states gave up on California, immigrants are still coming, bringing muscle and ideas to the state’s economy. NEWS 3-7 S E R I E S AT A G L A N C E
SUNDAY
SEPT. 1 9
SEPT. 26
OCT. 3
California relies more on immigrant labor than any other state and almost any developed country. That’s the result of decades-long economic and demographic shifts as well as political choices.
More than 1 0 million undocumented immigrants have moved to the United States since Congress vowed a crackdown in 1 986. A key reason: the government’s failure to lock them out of jobs.
Immigrants have driven down wages in low-skilled trades. But they’ve made life easier for middle- and upper-income Californians.
Changing U.S. immigration policy means grappling with polarizing choices – such as amnesty and a national ID card.