Many immigrants survive at poverty level by selling flowers on streets
By Joel Hood
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Posted February 14 2006
West Lake Worth · Battered but not beaten, Nemer Morales is living his American dream on a crowded, noisy intersection in western Palm Beach County.
It's a few minutes past 5 p.m. on a recent Wednesday. A stiff breeze whips over the pavement, bringing the sharp smell of burnt rubber and diesel fumes. Cars and minivans rush by.
"It's not easy to be out here," Morales said. "Only the poor man does this, sells flowers this way."
The street light above his head flashes red and Morales hoists four bouquets of roses into the air. He wades across five lanes of frenzied traffic, cars screeching to a halt around him. After two hours on this corner, Morales has yet to sell a single rose.
"What can you do?" he said. "They don't buy, they don't buy."
Most days, flower vendors such as Morales are largely invisible in the larger picture. But on Valentine's Day, demand blossoms and they find themselves on the front lines of commerce.
An immigrant from Nicaragua, Morales, 34, is one of probably thousands in South Florida who make a living selling flowers, food and other items on street corners. The true number is unknown because nobody keeps track of them. Most are immigrants from Latin America. Many do not speak English.
One way or another, they carve out lives here at or below the poverty line, sending whatever extra money they make to their fractured families back home.
- two more pages of article at http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/pal...=sfla-news-palm