Venezuelan migrants settle into life in Trinidad after registration

Venezuelan migrants wait in line to register at the Caroline Building, Wilson Road, Scarborough, Tobago, on Saturday.
Venezuelan migrants wait in line to register at the Caroline Building, Wilson Road, Scarborough, Tobago, on Saturday.

(Trinidad Guardian) Gas­par­il­lo res­i­dent Verne and his Venezue­lan part­ner Jen­nifer will like­ly be head­ing for the al­tar since he said Jen­nifer was among the 400 who didn’t suc­ceed in be­ing reg­is­tered last Fri­day.

“It might be the on­ly thing we can do since she’s not well and even though she tried for reg­is­tra­tion she didn’t make it and in any case, that’s on­ly for a year,” he told Guardian Me­dia yes­ter­day af­ter spend­ing a long Fri­day—up to 9 pm—with her at the South reg­is­tra­tion cen­tre.

Verne said Jen­nifer, 35, came to T&T legal­ly last Sep­tem­ber from Tu­cu­pi­ta. She reg­is­tered with the Unit­ed Na­tions as a refugee seek­ing asy­lum, but couldn’t work. She de­cid­ed to ap­ply for the amnesty—fa­cil­i­tat­ing em­ploy­ment—when this was of­fered. “But last Fri­day at the South cen­tre, about 400 of them didn’t get through since they had no forms. She was among them. Plen­ty peo­ple cried Fri­day when they shut the cen­tre and peo­ple told us the reg­is­tra­tion was over.

“She didn’t go back since she has kid­ney is­sues and had an op­er­a­tion at the San Fer­nan­do Gen­er­al Hos­pi­tal to re­move kid­ney stones.”

He said Jen­nifer has chil­dren in Tu­cu­pi­ta and they both send things back to her home­town for the chil­dren. “But she felt if she could work legal­ly she would have been able to send more things back to them. As it is now, since we’re al­ready a com­mon-law man and wife, we ll prob­a­bly make it le­gal and she won’t have to go through any more has­sle with lin­ing up, won­der­ing if she’ll have a job af­ter a year or seek­ing refugee asy­lum.”

Farm­ing, PriceS­mart shop­ping in Cen­tral

Ch­agua­nas Cham­ber pres­i­dent Vish­nu Char­ran and mem­bers con­firm an ap­prox­i­mate 25 per cent in­crease in vis­i­bil­i­ty of Venezue­lans in the area since reg­is­tra­tion be­gan and ex­pect more.

Char­ran said, “They’re feel­ing safer now and peo­ple are job-seek­ing, fam­i­lies out shop­ping. They’re main­ly seek­ing con­struc­tion and agri­cul­ture jobs and peo­ple are em­ploy­ing them from Cou­va to Cara­pichaima.

“One Cou­va busi­ness­man in a pep­per/pota­to farm em­ployed 15. Un­skilled Venezue­lan women have been seek­ing house­keep­ing jobs. Some lo­cals are of­fer­ing jobs out of com­pas­sion as well as due to lack of steady lo­cal labour for agri­cul­ture and con­struc­tion sec­tors.

“Cer­tain­ly oth­ers are wor­ried about safe­ty—and are cau­tious—af­ter see­ing re­ports of Venezue­lans and crime and one killing a woman. One per­son from a par­tic­u­lar Cen­tral vil­lage told me they’re see­ing so many of them in their vil­lage, they’re wor­ried.”

Cham­ber mem­ber Bil­ly Ali said, “There’s mixed sen­ti­ment. Some Cen­tral busi­ness peo­ple and res­i­dents are con­cerned about the Venes and crime. But their pres­ence has in­deed in­creased the labour pool, some busi­ness­men wish more of them can speak Eng­lish.

“They’re al­ready con­tribut­ing eco­nom­i­cal­ly since we’re see­ing them shop­ping in PriceS­mart, Busy Cor­ner, and Su­per­Pharm. They call lo­cal PH taxi when they need trans­port and some have opened small food busi­ness­es in En­deav­our, Long­denville, and Ch­agua­nas.”

Pa­lo Seco 93 work­ing, some still in the bush

At least 28 out of the 93 Venezue­lans who were found in the Pa­lo Seco for­est a month ago are now reg­is­tered and work­ing, but there is still a group who are liv­ing off the grid in forest­ed ar­eas of the com­mu­ni­ty.

Res­i­dents of the area said last Wednes­day that those peo­ple have not sought to reg­is­ter, but are more fo­cused on work­ing where they can find em­ploy­ment and “buy­ing up bags of rice and flour” to send back to rel­a­tives in Venezuela.

Mem­bers of a Unit­ed Na­tions con­tin­gent which vis­it­ed some oth­er Venezue­lans in the area to­day, were ex­pect­ed to meet with the group in the for­est.

How­ev­er, some of those found in the for­est last month, who had been stay­ing at the Ir­win Park fa­cil­i­ty, sought reg­is­tra­tion and were ap­proved. Kim Quashie, as­sis­tant to Siparia cor­po­ra­tion chair­man Glen Ra­mad­har con­firmed this.

She said a fe­male Cunu­pia farmer em­ployed three and four are en­gaged in con­struc­tion work, both with room/board plus salary. One fe­male got a se­cu­ri­ty post with a $6,025 month­ly salary.

Three for­mer Venezue­lan sol­diers al­so got se­cu­ri­ty jobs, with one work­ing at Pen­ny­wise in La Ro­main. A for­mer col­lege pro­fes­sor is hop­ing to teach at any pri­vate school, but in the in­ter­im, he is work­ing on a farm, Quashie said.

An­oth­er got a job as a me­chan­ic in Pa­lo Seco. Quashie said oth­ers got con­struc­tion work and are be­ing paid be­tween $200-$250 a day. One man who is a bak­er got a job in Mara­bel­la. “Sev­er­al are go­ing for Sub­way in­ter­views in Pe­nal and we al­so have forms for them for KFC,” she added.