In South Carolina the Hispanic population had skyrocketed over this past decade, growing by 148% compared to 43% nationwide.
But the economic downturn in the United States hit Hispanics more than any other demographic, and a new and strict immigration law left many undocumented workers leaving the state and country altogether.
Enacted in June 2011, Act No. 69 made it legal for South Carolina police to stop anybody they suspect of being in the country illegally and made it a crime to give shelter or transport to an undocumented immigrant.
These provisions and others were blocked by a federal judge in December 2011, who saw them as unconstitutional. But fear of expensive fines and deportation had already spread among many Hispanics.
The region’s economy has since been paying the price in empty apartments and less demand for low-wage jobs. But none have struggled more than the 6,000 Hispanic-owned businesses that heavily depend on customers from its community.
The BBC’s Franz Strasser went to Greenville to speak to business owners who work and live there legally and are now left picking up the scraps.
My story from Miami, Florida: BBC News - Foreign investors fuel Florida housing boom
You can check out photos from the road here.

On a 3-day trip to Salt Lake Valley, I looked at how the Polynesian community is dealing with life in Utah. I realized that there are big Islander traditions in all parts of society, but also noticed that the youngest generation struggles a bit with finding their own identity.
Watch the story on the BBC News website
Scroll below to see photos, quotes and clips from the road.
(via Market Frenzy, From Trading Rooms to Living Rooms - NYTimes.com)
Good rundown of this last week on Wall Street.
Do you want a cynical, angry beast coming out or do you want someone who took some steps in his own life to rehabilitate himself?
This recovery is spread widely because every German town seems to have its periphery populated by the famed “mittelstand” of small and not-so-small companies, exporting countless unglamorous but profitable products. These companies are often family-owned and founded on values of quality and investment, combined with a shrewd search for markets.
If you do it for free, they won’t respect you in the morning. Or the next day. Or the day after that. You sink everybody’s boat in the harbor, not just yours. So just DON’T!
You shouldn’t care unless you have some weird obsession with justice.
Author Michael Lewis when asked if the casual NCAA Basketball fan should care about players not getting paid.
Damon Winter, of the New York Times, won photographer of the year for a newspaper for this image of Army Sgt Brian Keith during his last minutes with his wife and infant son, before deploying to Afghanistan.
(via BBC News - Pictures of the Year: Winning images from 2010)
I don’t know what to make of these accusations. Part of me wishes that all this journalistic energy had been directed instead to ferret out abuses by politicians who allocate government resources to campaign donors rather than to the neediest among us, but that’s not a real answer.
Great time lapse of San Francisco, simple, and good sound.
Steaming City (by Simon Christen)