Farmingville

Starting with two racially-motivated attempted murders in suburban Long Island, the Farmingville examines the tension surrounding the immigration debate in America.
Farmingville

Director/Producer: Carlos Sandoval
Director/Producer: Catherine Tambini

Production Company
Camino Bluff Productions

Release Date
January 18, 2004

In 2000, the shocking hate-based attempted murder of two Mexican day laborers in suburban Long Island brought national attention to the town of Farmingville, NY. Prospects for working with area contractors and landscapers had attracted more than 1,500 day laborers to the centrally located town of 15,000, raising tensions among some longtime residents. When the town proposes the building of a hiring hall for day laborers the plan is met with sharp resistance from both local and national anti-immigrant groups. For nearly a year, filmmakers Carlos Sandoval and Catherine Tambini lived and worked in Farmingville to document the stories of town leaders, residents, day laborers and activists. The resulting film creates empathy for the dilemmas faced by both the migrants and the townspeople. This 78-minute documentary shows how U.S. laws and infrastructure are often at odds with our increasingly globalized economy and how communities can be transformed, not only by changing demographics, but also by polarizing responses to them.

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