Obama and Congressional Hispanic Caucus Fail to Deliver Immigration Reform causing Harsh Alabama anti-Immigrant Law
FOLEY, ALABAMA &
SANTA FE, NM (By
Pamela Constable, WP)
October 9, 2011 ―
Trailer by trailer,
yard sale by yard
sale, and pew by
empty pew, a poor
but tight knit
immigrant community
on Alabama’s breezy
Gulf Coast is
rapidly
disintegrating.
This time it is not
a tornado or
hurricane uprooting
families and
scattering them to
the winds. It is a
new state law,
largely upheld last
week by a federal
district judge, that
seeks to drive
illegal immigrants
from the state by
curtailing many of
their rights,
punishing anyone who
knowingly employs,
houses or assists
them, and requiring
schools and police
to verify
immigrants’ legal
status.
Other states,
including Arizona,
Georgia and
Colorado, have
passed similar laws
in the past several
years in a growing
trend by state
legislatures to
crack down on
illegal immigration
within their borders
in the absence of
comprehensive
federal action. But
Alabama’s new law is
the toughest passed
so far, and it is
the only one to
withstand federal
lawsuits and other
legal challenges,
allowing it to take
virtually full
effect.
Across Alabama, news
of the court ruling
has swiftly spread
panic and chaos
among trailer parks
and working-class
areas where legal
and illegal
immigrant families
from Mexico and
Central America — as
many as 150,000
people, by some
estimates — live and
work at jobs their
bosses say local
residents largely
refuse to do.
In Foley, a
sprawling seaside
resort town where
hundreds of Hispanic
immigrants work in
restaurants, sod
farms and seafood
industries, many
families last week
were taking their
children out of
school, piling their
furniture into
trucks, offering
baby clothes and
bicycles on front
lawns for sale and
saying tearful
goodbyes to
neighbors and
co-workers they
might never see
again.
“This is the saddest
thing I have
experienced in my 18
years as a priest,”
said the Rev. Paul
Zoghby, who
ministers to a large
Hispanic flock at
St. Margaret of
Scotland Church.
“We’ve already lost
20 percent of the
congregation in the
past few weeks, and
many more will be
gone by next week.
It is a human
tragedy.”
After evening Mass
on Thursday,
families mingled
worriedly in the
church lobby, asking
how to get help and
debating where to
flee.
“I have a cousin in
Nashville. Maybe
we’ll try there,”
said a muscular
construction worker,
holding a sleeping
infant in his arms.
Others said they
planned to head for
Texas or Florida,
where the laws are
not as strict. None
wanted to return to
Mexico, where they
said wages are
pitifully low and
violent crime is a
constant threat.
Tough choices
Many such families
have legal and
illegal members,
which presents them
with wrenching
choices. One illegal
couple’s daughter,
born in the United
States, just won a
college scholarship;
another such
couple’s daughter
was recently engaged
to a local boy. Both
decided they would
flee Alabama anyway,
reluctantly putting
family unity and
safety before
individual
opportunities.
“This law has
shattered all our
dreams,” said Maria,
35, a house cleaner
and mother of two
from central Mexico,
weeping and
clutching at her
husband for support
in a church meeting
room. An illegal
immigrant, she asked
her last name not be
used. “We do the
jobs no one else
wants to do. We pay
taxes. We do not
harm anyone. Now the
government says they
don’t want us here,
but we have nowhere
to go. All the doors
are closing on us.
We can’t even drive
a car without being
afraid. I cannot
believe this is
God’s will.”
The new law passed
the state
legislature in June
after an
unprecedented
Republican sweep of
both chambers last
year and the
election of a
Republican governor,
Robert Bentley. Amid
a sustained economic
slump and rising
unemployment, this
political majority
finally gave
longtime advocates
of a crackdown on
illegal immigrants
the votes they
needed.
Sponsors of the
measure are
unapologetic about
its tough
provisions. The law
makes it a criminal
offense for an
illegal immigrant to
register a car, pay
a utility bill or
rent an apartment,
and it similarly
penalizes anyone who
hires, shelters or
signs a contract
with an illegal
immigrant.
As its backers see
it, the law is a
long-overdue panacea
that will open up
thousands of jobs to
struggling Alabamans
squeezed out of the
market by cheap
illegal labor. They
also hope the law —
after surviving
legal challenges by
the Justice
Department and other
groups — will
pressure the federal
government to
overhaul its
immigration system.
“I have no doubt
that this is the
best thing for the
long-term economic
health of our state
and no doubt that
this is what a
majority of the
people of Alabama
wants,” said state
Sen. Scott Beason,
chief sponsor of the
measure. “We have
almost 10 percent
unemployment, and we
need to put our
people to work. I
understand there are
concerns, but the
law needs to be
given a chance.”
Despite such
assertions, the law
has aroused
condemnation and
concern from an
assortment of
Alabamans, including
some unusual allies.
White farmers,
including
conservative
Republicans,
complain their field
crews have fled and
that their crops
will rot on the
vine. Black church
and civil rights
leaders, whose
communities suffer
from high
unemployment, decry
the law as a reprise
of Alabama’s racist
history.
“These Republican
politicians are
running for office
on Christian values,
but this law is in
blatant disregard of
Christian values. It
is bringing back the
shameful and ugly
past of our state,”
said the Rev. Roger
Price, pastor of
Birmingham’s iconic
16th Street Baptist
Church, which was
bombed in 1963
during the civil
rights conflict.
“I admit we have an
immigration
problem,” he said,
“but this is not the
way to solve it.”
Local government
officials in heavily
Hispanic communities
have also expressed
worry, confusion and
indignation over
aspects of the law.
Some police
officials privately
say they are
uncomfortable about
how far they should
go in checking
drivers’ legal
status. Some school
officials are upset
about the effect the
law has had on
Hispanic parents who
fear they will be
deported while their
children are in
class.
William Lawrence,
the principal of
Foley Elementary
School, said
frightened immigrant
families withdrew 25
students last week,
even though all the
children were U.S.
citizens. He said
the Hispanic
community was swept
by rumors parents
would be arrested
when they came to
collect their
children. Many
families asked
teachers and others
to act as their
children’s emergency
drivers or legal
guardians.
“We are doing all we
can to reassure
parents their kids
are safe, and things
have calmed down
some, but this was
extremely wrong,”
Lawrence said. “I
hope our lawmakers
did not do it
deliberately. They
won, because now
people are leaving.
But there is no
reason to create
such terrible fear
of parents being
separated from their
children.”
Alabama, a largely
agricultural state,
has long relied on
seasonal Mexican
farm laborers to
harvest peaches,
tomatoes and other
crops under
temporary guest
worker visa
programs. What has
made the past decade
different, officials
said, is a surge of
illegal immigrants
who have put down
roots, taken
permanent jobs at
low wages and
drained public
health and education
budgets. Officials
estimate the state
spends about $280
million per year on
public services for
illegal immigrant
families.
Republican lawmakers
said they want to
bolster the national
guest worker program
to return to an
orderly legal flow
of foreign field
laborers, but a
number of farm
owners interviewed
last week said that
the program was
cumbersome and
inadequate and that
they could not find
local American
workers willing to
toil long hours in
hot fields.
“There is a lot of
heavy lifting and
manual labor, and
you are out there in
the sun and the
rain. It is just not
attractive to
Americans,” said Mac
Higginbotham, an
official with the
Alabama Farmers
Federation.
The group represents
about 40,000 farmers
and opposed the new
immigration law.
“We have people
losing 40 to 60
percent of their
crops this season,”
Higginbotham said.
“The law is
affecting everyone.”
Residents’
reactions
In Foley, some
residents have been
frustrated by the
influx of Hispanic
immigrants,
especially those
that are illegal.
Some longtime
parishioners left
St. Margaret when it
initiated a formal
ministry to
Hispanics. A few
Hispanic church
members mentioned
incidents such as
drivers yelling they
should go home or
pharmacists
demanding to see
proof of legality
before filling
prescriptions.
“If I were Mexican,
I would probably
want to come here,
too, but they need
to become citizens
in a legal way and
pay taxes like the
rest of us,” said
Mary Reinhart, a
Foley resident who
works at a resort
near the beach.
People “start
businesses that
undercut everyone
because they work so
much cheaper with
illegals,” she said.
“There needs to be
more regulation and
a proper way to make
them legal.”
But there was also
an outpouring of
sympathy and sadness
from longtime
inhabitants of Foley
toward Hispanic
families they had
gotten to know as
neighbors,
co-workers, tenants
or employees. Even
some who said they
opposed illegal
immigration and
supported the new
law seemed to feel
conflicted about
seeing families they
had come to know and
like suddenly
leaving.
At a Mexican
restaurant where
Zoghby, the pastor,
treated several
Mexican families to
farewell tacos and
beer Thursday, a
gray-haired customer
came over and hugged
one of the departing
guests.
At a half-empty
trailer park where
several Hispanic
families were
packing up on
Friday, the longtime
manager, Tom
Boatwright, watched
glumly.
“They are my very
best renters,” he
said. “They are
hardworking and
never cause trouble.
I really hate to see
them go.”
A mile away, in a
development of new
houses, one Mexican
family was loading a
decade’s worth of
belongings into a
pickup truck and a
neighboring family
had spread clothing,
toys, furniture and
bed linens out on
the lawn for sale. A
stream of people
pulled up in cars
and trucks to
browse, most of them
white Alabamans.
Several said they
supported the new
law or wanted to see
the border shut
down, but all
treated the Mexican
families with
cordial familiarity.
“I don’t know what
to think. The law is
supposed to be doing
one thing, but it
seems to be doing
the opposite,” said
Lisa Snow, a
grandmother who was
rifling through baby
clothes at the yard
sale. Snow said she
had just lost her
office job but was
sorry Mexican
families were losing
everything. “It just
feels very personal
now,” she said.












