Picturesque mountain town becomes hotspot for America's migrant boom

  • A wave of wealthy outsiders have moved to Bozeman due to its natural beauty
  • Their luxury houses and amenities are supported by an influx of migrant labor
  • A minority have directed their ire at the migrants, with reports of hate crimes 

A picturesque Montana city has become an unexpected hotspot for America's migrant boom, sparking a backlash from a group of hard-right residents.

Bozeman, once a quiet backwater known for its small-town charm, is now one of the fastest-growing small cities in the country.

Home to around 56,000 people, the city's economy has grown exponentially and thousands of jobs have been created. But some long standing residents fear their community is being destroyed.

Schools are struggling to cope with the influx of multilingual children, while locals say they are being priced out of their homes.

A small but vocal minority have directed their ire at the migrants themselves, with reports of a spike in hate crimes against the Latino community.

picturesque mountain town becomes hotspot for america's migrant boom

The picturesque mountain city of Bozeman, Montana, has become an unexpected hotspot for America's migrant boom, sparking a backlash from a group of hard-right residents

picturesque mountain town becomes hotspot for america's migrant boom

Bozeman became popular due to its access to outdoor activities in Yellowstone National Park

picturesque mountain town becomes hotspot for america's migrant boom

Some locals have even blamed the popular television series 'Yellowstone', starring Kevin Costner, for romanticizing the Mountain West and enticing an influx of wealthy outsiders

The first wave of migration, however, came not from the U.S. southern border but from Montana's western neighbors.

Hundreds of affluent Americans from left-leaning states such as California, Oregon and Colorado, upped sticks to Bozeman and Gallatin County in the wake of the pandemic.

They were lured in by the city's proximity to Yellowstone National Park and Big Sky, an upscale skiing town home to the Yellowstone Club, whose members include Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg.

Some locals have even blamed the popular television series 'Yellowstone', starring Kevin Costner, for romanticizing the Mountain West.

They are angry that their once working-class neighborhood has been taken over by dozens of tech and software companies, while the average home now sells for $770,000.

'There are a lot of out-of-staters that have some money, and they're willing to pay above asking price,' Dylan Heintz, 28, who grew up in the city, told The New York Times. 'That definitely hurts people.'

Bozeman's population has grown by 50 per cent in a decade, sparking an uptick in bumper stickers proclaiming 'Montana is Full'.

But the wealthy families who now occupy these new homes have brought with them a second, altogether different wave of migrants.

Their demands for the upscale amenities that they left behind, from high-end dining to luxury housing, requires intensive labor.

And for this, Bozeman, like much of America, has turned to an ever growing pool of undocumented migrants.

The Latino portion of Gallatin County's population has grown by almost 140 per cent - from 2.8 percent to 5 percent - between 2010 and 2020, according to U.S. census data.

This is thought to be an underestimate as it does not include 2021 - Bozeman's most explosive year of housing growth.

As many as 723 migrants with immigration cases have settled in Gallatin County, with around a third of these coming from Honduras, according to analysis of immigration court data by The Washington Post.

Others have come from countries like Guatemala, Peru and Venezuela.

The number of students who need additional English language instruction has doubled in a matter of years to 350.

Their arrival has transformed Bozeman seemingly overnight.

Now the sleek modern homes of Bozeman's new west coast imports stand cheek-to-jowl with RVs and tent encampments that house the city's poor Latino population.

A new Whole Foods caters to one half of the new arrivals, while lines of taco trucks feed the other.

picturesque mountain town becomes hotspot for america's migrant boom

Bozeman has become an unlikely destination for migrants from Central and South America

picturesque mountain town becomes hotspot for america's migrant boom

Hundreds of affluent Americans from left-leaning states such as California, Oregon and Colorado, upped sticks to Bozeman and Gallatin County in the wake of the pandemic

picturesque mountain town becomes hotspot for america's migrant boom

Luxury farm rentals are only going up in price in the area, with this property available for almost $250 per night

picturesque mountain town becomes hotspot for america's migrant boom

But locals are angry that their once working-class neighborhood has been taken over by dozens of tech and software companies, while the average home now sells for $770,000

READ MORE: The Montana community torn apart by Airbnb 

In some respects, Bozeman is flourishing.

Hispanic immigrants contributed more than $300million in economic benefits to the city in 2022, according to a study by South NorthNexus, a nonprofit that offers legal aid in Montana.

But not everyone is happy.

A group of ultra conservative residents have formed Take Back Bozeman, which decries what is deemed to be a growing 'anti-white' and 'anti-Christian' sentiment across the country.

Their Facebook page, which has 1,200 followers, describes the group as an assembly of 'concerned citizens doing all we can to NOT become Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle, SF, or even Boise'.

It rails against the 'rapidly growing Hispanic presence' in Bozeman, claiming the effects are mostly 'not desirable', with sectors of the economy becoming Latino 'enclaves'.

The group argues, without producing empirical evidence, that immigrants will bring 'brazen' crime 'representative of the places they come from'.

One post adds: 'If you choose to come here, you are choosing a vastly white city, with its own culture and its own norms, where we speak English and so should you, and if you do not know Christ, we would be happy to introduce you.'

Take Back Bozeman is responsible for multiple threats to local immigration workers, according to High Country News.

The group regularly posts comments about Bienvenidos, the city's largest migrant aid group, including the names and faces of its workers, as well as news stories involving crimes committed by migrants.

One such incident saw a downtown bar fight end with two Hispanic men attacking a man with knives and hammers, leaving him with cuts to most of his body and a deep laceration to his face.

Gallatin County arrest records indicate that both suspects are subject to an immigration detainer from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, also known as an ICE hold, according to local CBS media.

Commenting on the incident in February, Bozeman Police Detective Captain McNeil appeared to echo the concerns of certain residents.

'I think that as we grow as a city, we're going to see more violent crime,' he said. 'And we're going to have more issues like this.'

picturesque mountain town becomes hotspot for america's migrant boom

The pandemic saw wealthy city-dwellers buy up extra homes in tourist hotspots like Bozeman where they could spend lockdown. Figures are correct as of early June

He is not the only local official to raise the alarm.

Gallatin County Sheriff Dan Springer said in January that he and his deputies were seeing a growing number of illegal immigrants in the community, with six individuals being placed under an ICE hold.

It has become a hot topic across Montana, with Republican Representative Ryan Zinke slamming the Biden administration following the news that five migrants, reportedly from Venezuela, had been flown to the small city of Kalispell, Flathead County, from New York.

'The only way an illegal immigrant from South America ends up in Montana is if a "nonprofit" connected with the Biden Administration moves them there,' Zinke said in a statement.

'Montana law enforcement, schools, hospitals and safety nets are being stressed to their max because of the Biden border crisis. It's unacceptable and absolutely needs to end now.'

But aid groups have fired back, blaming local officials for fueling anti-immigrant sentiment and a rise in hate crimes.

One Bienvenidos volunteer told High Country News that she saw a white girl tip a garbage can over a Latina student and call her 'Mexican trash' at a middle school.

Rosa, who fled gang violence in Honduras in 2020 along with her husband, Luis, told High Country News she worried about what this environment was doing to their youngest daughter.

'The bus brings her home and then she locks herself in her room,' she said.

Read more

OTHER NEWS

10 minutes ago

Jamie Lee Curtis Marks 40 Years Since First Date with Husband Christopher Guest: 'Love Is Love'

10 minutes ago

Chargers News: Chargers Eye Record-Breaking Deal for Pro Bowl Lineman Rashawn Slater

10 minutes ago

Hurricane Freddy sets record as longest-lasting in history

10 minutes ago

First defending women's Wimbledon champ knocked out in first round since 1994

10 minutes ago

I Ran Into An Old Classmate After Losing 168 Pounds. Her Reaction Left Me Completely Stunned.

11 minutes ago

First dive to Titanic wreck since Titan submersible disaster to take place this month

11 minutes ago

Kobbie Mainoo: The ‘humble and respectful’ teenager at home on the biggest stage

11 minutes ago

Supreme Court sidesteps new several new gun cases, including challenge to state assault weapons ban

11 minutes ago

Rudy Giuliani disbarred over 'false and misleading' statements on 2020 election

11 minutes ago

AI is learning from what you said on Reddit, Stack Overflow or Facebook. Are you OK with that?

11 minutes ago

Federal, Manitoba governments announce boost to child-care funding, wages

11 minutes ago

Swimmer missing in Otonabee River in Peterborough: police

11 minutes ago

NHL teams drop a staggering $1B on Day 1 of free agency period

11 minutes ago

How thousands of Americans got caught in fintech’s false promise

15 minutes ago

Video: Waleed Aly shocks co-stars with 'fart smelling' claim on The Project: 'I'm not making this up'

15 minutes ago

Video: Major development in hunt for Jay Slater as police search Tenerife Airbnb: Officers spend two hours inside holiday let where missing teen stayed with two mystery men before disappearing two weeks ago

15 minutes ago

Video: Fit and healthy Aussie TikTok boss Govind Sandhu reveals the three red flags that exposed stage-four cancer 'running wild' through his body even as he ran gruelling half-marathons - and how you can protect yourself

15 minutes ago

Video: Kroy Biermann ticketed by police over 'aggressive' dog Stone 'getting loose and terrorizing a neighbor'

15 minutes ago

Video: Around 100 worshippers are crushed to death in stampede at Hindu religious gathering in India

15 minutes ago

Video: Heart-stopping moment reggaeton singer's hair goes up in flames in middle of performance

16 minutes ago

Why hiking interest rates would be no 'slam dunk' for the Reserve Bank

16 minutes ago

Exciting new airline routes from June 2024 and beyond

16 minutes ago

McDonald’s Is Bringing a Global Fan-Favorite to the U.S. For the First Time Ever

16 minutes ago

Election 2024: Row erupts over Keir Starmer’s working hours if he becomes Prime Minister

16 minutes ago

Andy Murray's broken body denies him the chance of a fitting Wimbledon farewell

16 minutes ago

Newly-appointed Ministers to be sworn in on Wednesday

16 minutes ago

Why the Tesla share price jumped 13% in June

16 minutes ago

Judge Blocks Biden Ban on Natural-Gas Exports in Win for Red-State Coalition

16 minutes ago

How to spot an election bot as fake accounts flood social media

16 minutes ago

Goldman's favorite stocks for the second half—including 3 additions to its conviction list

17 minutes ago

Media mogul Barry Diller weighs a bid to gain control of Paramount

17 minutes ago

Is the National Grid share price the biggest bargain on the FTSE 100?

17 minutes ago

Nika Muhl Resurrects Cool Nickname With 'Elite' Play During Storm-Wings

17 minutes ago

David Attenborough's colorful impact on Wimbledon and tennis: yellow balls

17 minutes ago

Defending Wimbledon champ Marketa Vondrousova loses in 1st round

17 minutes ago

Farage amasses 39 billion video views as Reform dominate social media election battle

17 minutes ago

From Sir Cliff Richard to Dave Grohl: Who’s who in the Royal Box on Wimbledon day two?

17 minutes ago

Sensitive habitats in Labrador, on Sentosa and Southern Islands affected by oil slicks: Desmond Lee

17 minutes ago

Junior Boks make five changes for U20 Championship clash against Argentina

17 minutes ago

Latest storm path tracker shows where Hurricane Beryl will hit next