2006年VOA标准英语-US Copes With Growing Population, Approach(在线收听) |
By Mike O'Sullivan watch US Population report Census officials say the U.S. population will reach 300 million in October, and that the 300th million American may well be a Latino living in the Southwest. Mike O'Sullivan reports from Los Angeles, the growing population brings promise, and challenges, for U.S. urban centers. ------------------------------------------------------- The U.S. population is increasing at nearly one percent a year, making the United States the world's fastest growing industrial nation. Sixty percent of the growth is natural. Forty percent comes from immigration. Demographer William Frey of the Brookings Institution says immigrants are moving to cities like New York, Miami, Houston, Dallas and Los Angeles. William Frey In Los Angeles, there are concentrations of immigrants in Chinatown, Little Tokyo, Koreatown and other ethnic enclaves. A shopkeeper from China has Spanish-speaking customers and friends in neighboring shops from other countries.
Throughout the American Southwest, immigrants from Latin America are changing the culture, and they form an important part of the workforce. Hispanics account for half of U.S. population growth. Some critics of immigration worry about strains on the health care system and the schools. Ira Mehlman is a spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration Reform. He says the children of recent immigrants have problems in public schools, where classes are taught in English. "Half of the school district in Los Angeles is non-English-speaking, which means that you have the nation's second largest educational institution that can't educate an entire generation of kids," he said. Harry Pachon of the Tomas Rivera Policy Institute says there have always been strains when population grows, but the country assimilated earlier waves of immigration.
Population growth is a global phenomenon, and others worry about strains on the natural environment. Dan Silver of the Endangered Habitats League says unchecked population growth is changing the natural landscape that we share with other species.
He worries that not enough planning is being done. So do some population experts, who say cities like Los Angeles suffer strains from immigration, while the country as a whole benefits from it. A generation of Americans born after World War II, the so-called Baby Boomers, is ready to retire, and some population experts say immigrants can keep the economy vibrant. Dowell Myers teaches policy and planning at the University of Southern California. "Because after all, we're growing here the future middle class taxpayers and we're growing the future workers," he said. " When these Baby Boomers want to retire, a lot of the replacements - we estimate about two-thirds - are going to be the children of immigrants." Demographer William Frey says immigrants with young families will help keep the United States competitive. "As we become much more globalized society, globalized economy, where what we produce here, how we produce it here, has to be bought and consumed by people in other parts of the world," he said, "and vice versa, it's paramount that we have people from different cultures helping us make decisions in our workplaces and in our schools."
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原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/3/31369.html |