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Crackdown On Unlicensed Barbers Brings Latino Backlash

Unlicensed Latino Barbers

By MICHAEL MELIA   02/17/12 01:59 PM ET  AP

WATERBURY, Conn. -- A crackdown on unlicensed barbers in Waterbury is stirring a backlash among Latinos, who represent most of the violators.

More established barbers are cheering the hard line taken by Mayor Neil O'Leary, a former police chief, who announced this week that unlicensed shops in the Brass City may be forced to close. Some of the veterans pushed for the city to enforce the regulations, saying anything less would be a disservice to their profession.

In shops catering to the fast-growing Latino population, some unlicensed barbers say they feel they are being made into scapegoats for business slowing down in other shops.

"It's not our fault that they don't have any customers," said Carlos Bermudez, 23. He said he is trying to come up with $2,000 to obtain a barber's license, although he feels he learned to handle clippers just fine growing up in Puerto Rico. "There it's in the blood. It just comes naturally."

Of the 120 barber shops in Waterbury, the mayor says 20 are unlicensed or employ unlicensed barbers, and 16 of those are run by Latinos. Officials say they directed those barbers more than a year ago to secure state-mandated licenses, and barbers who are not at least in the process of obtaining certification will be asked to leave the city.

O'Leary said it is a matter of public health – like other cities, Waterbury is not immune to outbreaks of head lice – but he is also sympathetic to the complaints of established barbers. The mayor, who took office in December, said some of them first approached him with concerns during his election campaign.

"I feel very strongly that the people who spent the time and the money and effort to get licenses have a legitimate issue here," O'Leary said in an interview.

The city was prepared for controversy. The health department was ready to start enforcing the requirements before the election, but O'Leary said his predecessor held off because officials knew it might not sit well with Hispanic voters.

As expected, the crackdown has drawn criticism from advocacy groups, who say the licensing system is unnecessarily complex and biased against Hispanics because the exam is not available in Spanish as it is in surrounding states. In meetings with the mayor, the state's Latino and Puerto Rican Affairs Commission has urged him to give barbers more time to secure licenses.

"You've got a lot of people working, not on the street, not on welfare," community advocate Juan Marrero said. "They are working as barbers, and they are making money for their families, so don't push them out, or you're going to create a worse problem."

A cultural divide between the two camps of barbers falls along Waterbury's East Main Street, where Bermudez and his colleagues were tending to a roomful of young men waiting for trims Wednesday at the Rey de la Tijera (King of the Scissors) barbershop. Across the street, 69-year-old Vin Ippolito waited for business in his one-man barber shop.

For Ippolito, a barber's license separates a professional from an impostor. He pointed to his combs soaking in glass jar of blue disinfectant and said not all barbers sterilize their equipment. And if they don't have a license, he said, you have to wonder what they might be hiding.

"You know where a lot of people learn how to cut hair?" he asked. "Jail."

Waterbury saw the largest increase in Hispanic residents of any Connecticut city in the decade leading up to 2010, according to U.S. Census Bureau figures. The Hispanic population grew 47 percent to roughly 34,500 of the city's 110,000 people.

One of the seven barbers at Rey de la Tijera, 19-year-old Waterbury native Carmelo Feliciano, said he learned to cut hair from an older brother and has no intention of seeking a license. While he earns about $450 a week by providing $13 haircuts, the course required for a license costs between $2,000 and $3,000.

"It's a lot of money to be spending," he said.

Waterbury's public health director, Roseann Wright, said the city has helped some unlicensed barbers find money to pursue licenses and cosmetology schools offering reduced tuition. At a certain point, however, she said state requirements have to be fulfilled for the sake of public safety.

"If you were in a hospital would you want a nurse without a license treating you?" she said. "Let's not belittle licensure. Let's not belittle what the state has required of individuals."

Connecticut is starting to make some concessions. The education requirement for a barber's license was recently reduced from 1,500 hours to 1,000 hours, and the department of public health is working on a separate course just for barbers that would spare them from having to master hairdressing and cosmetology, too.

Department spokesman William Gerrish said the state is also working on a Spanish-language examination.

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WATERBURY, Conn. -- A crackdown on unlicensed barbers in Waterbury is stirring a backlash among Latinos, who represent most of the violators. More established barbers are cheering the hard line taken...
WATERBURY, Conn. -- A crackdown on unlicensed barbers in Waterbury is stirring a backlash among Latinos, who represent most of the violators. More established barbers are cheering the hard line taken...
Filed by Cindy Y. Rodriguez  | 
 
 
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12:02 PM on 02/21/2012
Hell the illegals don't have drivers licenses, so why should they get barbers licenses? It is the feeling among them that they have NO reason to follow any of our laws. It is time to arrest and charge the illegal barbers, and check their immigration status. If they are here illegally, ship them back to whereever their home country is and they can cut hair to their hearts content. All they have to do is bribe the cops or other regulators.

This is one of the reasons that their home countries are poor and makes the US attractive. They are subverting the very things that make the US a liveable place, the equal application of the law and following them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
parabq
01:36 PM on 02/20/2012
"If you were in a hospital would you want a nurse without a license treating you?" she said. "Let's not belittle licensure. Let's not belittle what the state has required of individuals."

Barbers arent nurses - get real !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! This is just another way for barbers to to control who gets into the profession. A license to cut hair??? This isnt life and death ! Quit wating taxpayer on BS like this !
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
markspence
12:25 AM on 02/21/2012
I agree that it's not life or death, but there may be good reasons for having these licenses.
05:46 PM on 02/23/2012
You are totally ignorant
11:09 AM on 02/20/2012
For some reason the people of Mexico have an air and an attitude of entitlement about them where they think that they can do what ever they want and don't care about our laws more than any other group of Spanish decent.

The people from Spain, Central America, and South America are different from the Mexican immigrants in the their overall attitude. I have known Spanish people from many different countries and most of the Latinos from Mexico think they are special and above our laws. One of the reasons is that they come from a country where corruption runs deep in the Mexican government and some of the police are corrupt as well. Mexico is for the most part a third world country without any respect for our Nation or laws. If they can get away with crossing our borders than they do it.
yesythegreat
I'm just wasting time
04:40 PM on 02/21/2012
Did you read the article? Or did you just read the headline and assume you knew what it said. It said Hispanic, not Mexican. And the one ethnicity they did specifically mention was Puerto Rican, and last time I checked Puerto Rico is a commonwealth of the USA. So before you start ranting your useless assumptions take some time to read the article thoroughly. It's comments like yours that perpetuates stereotypes which in turn continues this euro-centric racist attitude.

And as for your corruption argument, do you realize how corrupt this country is? All of those white collar criminals are Caucasian!
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DMGabe
Anyone who runs a marathon is an athlete
08:02 AM on 02/22/2012
Thank you Yesy!
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10:11 AM on 02/20/2012
More Latino crime, who is surprised?
10:10 PM on 02/19/2012
It doesn't matter what race you are. Rules are rules. If you're going to live in Uncle Sam's house, you play by his rules. Black, white, hispanic, asian...nobody's special.
05:05 PM on 02/19/2012
"It's not our fault that they don't have any customers," said Carlos Bermudez, 23.

Hey Carlos,and it’s not the fault of the licensed barbers that you don't have a license.
That is your responsibility.
05:01 PM on 02/19/2012
I know here in brooklyn they sell a lot of drugs out of them. Not all but most.
02:00 PM on 02/19/2012
If licenses are required by law,itsounds like the unlicensed barbers think they are above the law.
01:49 PM on 02/19/2012
Leave them alone! They make their own rules. They live by a different rule of law.
06:33 PM on 02/20/2012
what? they live by a rule of law that allows them to dump their garbage behind the local thrift shop! If a license is required, it is required from all. No exceptions! Better yet, round them up and ship them out!
lynniemiller
Aware, alert and listening
01:47 PM on 02/19/2012
Unlicensed is illegal. No sympathy here.
01:04 PM on 02/19/2012
ANOTHER PROBLEM WITH ILLEGALS THINKING THEY CAN MAKE UP THEIR OWN RULES/LAWS!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jose Ocasio
Silly Re.pub'S, Tea Parties R 4 kids
09:05 AM on 02/22/2012
Tallywacker, Puerto Rico is part of the USA, go back to school and quit screaming.
12:07 PM on 02/19/2012
"Well, that Law is against us!"
02:02 PM on 02/19/2012
No, you are against the law.
12:06 PM on 02/19/2012
"Race Card Game!"Wo is Me!
09:26 AM on 02/19/2012
Latinos have no rules except their own...they brought their own anarchy with them...that's why people don't take to their presence here.
01:05 PM on 02/19/2012
TRUE THAT. THAT'S THE PROBLEM.
09:25 AM on 02/19/2012
In nearly every instance of hispanic immigrants whether legal or illegal it seems like the race card is always used to try to get away with not following our State laws. So we are all racist because we want fairness like getting the same licenses we as Americans have to get?? And what about driver's licenses and car insurance too? Somehow the law does not apply to hispanics even though they want to live in the United States for a better way of life.