This story tells how some immigrants who got amnesty in '87 are doing now and how the economy and country did after they got their green cards and citizenship. - - Donna Poisl
By Matt O'Brien, Contra Costa Times
BERKELEY -- Patricia Hernandez has the unenviable job of cleaning up the mess left by undergraduates at UC Berkeley.
"Whatever they break, we fix it," she said, sitting on a dormitory couch during her morning break. "Change light bulbs, fix furniture, fix toilets, unclog toilets, replace toilets."
Hernandez, 48, is not complaining, just describing. She is proud of the job she has held for 18 years and the financial security it brings. She loves that her brother is a cook at a nearby campus cafeteria and that her daughter works as a pharmacy technician a few blocks away.
She loves it because 40 years ago, she was living in a Mexican orphanage. Twenty-five years ago, she was living in a car in Southern California and struggling to find work because she was an illegal immigrant.
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