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Bernal Preschool unveils study on Preschool/Learning Center

­by Mauricio Vela

Bernal Preschool Parents & Supporters Celebrate Cinco de Mayo by releasing seven month feasibility study for New Bernal Preschool/Learning Center.

Over the past eight months, with the financial support provided Supervisor Ammiano’s office, the Bernal Preschool committee with participation and support of parents, community members, childcare experts, elected and appointed officials has examined three options to ensure that Bernal Preschool remains in our Community Hub.

The Bernal Preschool Committee has been fighting for the past 2 1⁄2 years to remain in the Community Hub that has been their home for almost 30 years. Due to the renovation of the library, the library and its supporters have taken this opportunity to evict the Preschool. Preschool parents, with support from Parent Voices, and community supporters have refused to accept the permanent displacement to Paul Revere elementary. Gladys Soto states” We refuse to be pushed out of our home for thirty years after we put in the sweat equity to keep the library open, renovate the playstructure, gymnasium, and Neighborhood Center, and revitalized Cortland Ave. We wanted to create a safety net for our children, youth, and seniors most at risk. We successfully did that and now we’re being asked to leave.”

Based on our findings, the committee prioritized Option “C” which is to utilized 2,700 sq. ft of land within the Bernal Playground. Should this option not be realized then the committee supports Option “A” which is to return to the Library upon completion of the renovation in 2009. The committee will continue to meet with the responsible governing bodies as well with members of the community, and other supporters to create the “political will” and financial support to make our new Preschool/Learning Center a reality.

Building the new preschool addresses the Mission/Bernal short fall of 700 childcare slots. Presently, the Bernal preschool offers 25 slots. By building the new preschool 25 additional slots will be created at the Preschool and an additional 50 will be provided at Paul Revere by the Mission Neighborhood Centers which has offered to take over the space once the Preschool returns to the Hub for an increase of 75 Bernal slots. Over the last five years Bernal Heights has lost Little People’s Workshop Coop and Alfa Day childcare center. Building the new preschool also contributes to the city wide childcare shortfall. Supervisor Ammiano, Daly, and Assemblyman Mark Leno have come out publicly in support of the new Preschool/Learning. The new Preschool/Learning Center will also allow City College to provide parenting classes for the preschool parents, nannies, and stroller moms of the community. Supervisor Ammiano added $1.6 million into the children and senior budget supplemental just introduce by Supervisor Daly on April 24th.

As part of the Preschool’s celebration of Cinco de Mayo, the preschool plans to unvail our findings to the public.

Que Viva Cinco de Mayo!!! Si Se Puede!!

Early College Commitment briefing

by Elisabeth Pinio

Mariachi familyMariachi family

The Campaign for College Opportunity announced a briefing on SB 890, Early College Commitment, to discuss the bill dedicated to providng access to college and financial aid for low-income students. Youth and their families are encouraged to start planning for college at a young age.

The event will take place at the East Bay Community Foundation in Oakland on Wednesday, May 2, from 10 a.m. to noon. RSVP to Danielle Lafayette at (510) 645-1362, or Danielle@collegecampaign.org.

Three Women and a Chateau

The Tiburon Film Society will be presenting Three Women and a Chateau at the Bay Model in Sausalito. The film depicts three women – an heiress, a countess, and a doctor – through each of their stays at chateau, spanning three generations. The drama depicts the romantic, glamorous life of each woman, sprinkled with scandal, despair and disaster.

The feature was part of the Tiburon International Film Festival in March, and will be shown Thursday, May 3, at 6 p.m. Admission is free.

Mujeres Music Festival

Mariachi Picante’s 2nd Annual Mujeres Music Festival will take place Friday, May 4 at 8:30 p.m. to celebrate latino women in music. The event will feature Nada Lewis’, Gypsy-Latin accordion harmonies, cumbia dancing by Beatriz Restrepo, and dueling guitarists Manuel Constancio and José Roberto Hernandez.

The event will be held at La Peña Cultural Center in Berkeley. Admission is $18 advance purchase, $20 at the door. For more information, call (510) 849-2568 or visit www.lapena.org.

Cinco de Mayo Festival in San Francisco

Join the fun and celebrate! Commemorating Mexico’s indepedence since 1862, Historical Mission Dolores Park is hosting a Cinco de Mayo event on May 5 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Before the festivities, a tour will take place showcasing the park’s historical features. Dancing, music, and activities for children are all part of the fun, in an alcohol-free environment. Admission is free for this event. For more information, visit www.sfcincodemayo.com.

Soccer match adds to Cinco de Mayo festivities

A Cinco de Mayo celebration at Kezar Stadium will kick it up a notch with a soccer game! The festivities will take place May 5 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and the soccer game will begin at 2 p.m., California Victory Vs. Necaxa.

Mayor Gavin Newsom and members of the Board of Supervisors will commence the event with a ribbon cutting ceremony commemorating California Victory’s first home game at Kezar.

The event features fun for the whole family. Admission is free for children under seven, $9 ages 8-18, $12 for adults. Visit www.ca.iforniavictorysoccer.com to purchase tickets, or call (415) 593-1491.

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The real story of brutal arrest by ICE on TV show

by Tracie Morales

Garbriel García BernalGarbriel García Bernal

REALITY TV: Journalist
Cristina Saralegui reveals the nightmarish tales of immigration raids, arrests and deportations during
the April 30 episode of El Show de Cristina, airing on Univisión. During the program, Saralegui will interview
families who claim they faced violent and brutal encounters with immigration enforcement agents. For more information visit www.cristinaonline.com.

DRESS TO IMPRESS: Actress Eva Longoria, host of the 2007 NCLR ALMA Awards, promises a fashion forward celebration as she dons nearly 15 outfits from top Latino designers during the ceremony airing June 5 on ABC. The ALMA Awards were created in 1995 by the National Council of La Raza to honor Latinos in the entertainment industry.

ALMA NOMINEES: Longoria was on hand with NCLR president Janet Murguia April 16 to announce the nominees in Beverly Hills. Best picture nominees are Babel, Bobby and Quinceañera. Best actor in a film nominees are Gael Garcia Bernal, for Babel; Jesse García, Quinceñera; and Michael Peña, World Trade Center. Best actress in a film nominees are Adriana Barraza, for Babel; Cameron Díaz, The Holiday; Eva Mendes, Trust The Man; and Emily Rios, Quinceariera.

ACTOR IN A TV SERIES: Santiago Cabrera, for Heroes; Miguel Ferrer, 4for Crossing Jordan; George López, for George López; Carlos Mencia, for Mind of Mencia; and Edward James Olmos, for Walkout.

ACTRESS IN A TV SERIES: América Ferrera, for Ugly Betty, Constance Marie, for George Lopez; Sara Ramirez, for Grey’s Anatomy and Alexa Vega, for Walkout. Find a complete list of nominees at www.almaawards.com.

MUST WATCH IN MAY: ABC’s Ugly Betty heats up this May with appearances from top Latina and Latino stars. Mexican actress Angé1ica Vale, known as Letty Solís from the Mexico telenovela La fea mas bella, joins Betty Suárez played by América Ferrera on May 17. Legendary actress and Academy Award winner, Rita Moreno, appears May 10 as tîa Mirta from Guadalajara, Mexico. Other appearances include Chilean actor Cristián De La Fuente and Puerto Rican actress Justina Machado.
Hispanic Link.

Middle school students to attend college seminar

by Elisabeth Pinio

Dennis HerreraDennis Herrera

The Harvard Club of San­ Francisco hosted its Early College Awareness Program at Everett Middle School on Saturday, April 28. Students and their families received valuable information and insight on preparing for a college education. Most of the teens will be the first in their families to attend college.

“I found out what I could do to prepare for my future, how I could get to the college of my dreams, and what can help me achieve my goal,” said one student from last year’s event.

Many that participated in the half-day seminar were school principals, guidance counselors, volunteers, and representatives of local organizations that provide guidance to San Francisco youth. The theme of the seminar was motivation, and inspiration.

National Town Hall meeting on federal Real ID ACT

The nation’s only open meeting on the REAL ID act took place Tuesday, May 1 on the campus of the University of California, Davis. The meeting will be conducted by Department of Homeland Security, and facilitated by the state Department of Motor Vehicles.

The REAL ID Act will require all California residents with a driver license or identification card to be recertified in a DMV field office. Individuals must bring identification documents, such as a certified birth certificate, an unexpired U.S. passport, proof of a social security number, and proof of address documents.

U.S. Congress hearing on witness protection

San Francisco District Attorney, Kamala D. Harris, was selected to testify before the United States Congress House Judiciary Committee to improve the protection of witnesses who cooperate with law enforcement to prosecute violent crime. DA Harris was invited to speak on behalf of the nation’s prosecutors.

Witness intimidation has been a problem throughout the state of California as well as the United States, as witnesses who provide incriminating information to the police face threats of murder and violence against them and their families.

Check N’ Go and Money Mart, sued for illegal business practices

City Attorney Dennis Herrera pressed charges against storefront lending institutions Check N’ Go and Money Mart for illegal, fraudulent business practices. The businesses, prizedby some for their short-term loans and convenience, were cited for unlawful interest rates on loans to low-income customers.

First Bank of Delaware, an affiliate based in Wilmington, Del., has also been named as a defendant in the case for aiding and abetting the instutitions’ lending scams.

Toxic Toy bill passes in assembly

During a legislative hearing on April 24, the Assembly Environmental Safety and Toxics Materials Committee passed AB 1108. Authored by Assemblywoman Fiona MA (D – San Francisco), this bill will prohibit manufacturers from using phthalates, a toxic chemical found in baby toys.

Passing AB 1108 has opened the floodgates for further scrutiny on chemicals used in children’s toys. “I thank my colleagues on the committee for moving in a direction that will protect the health of children.” Assemblywoman Ma said in a statement.

The Puerto Rican diáspora of Frank Espada

by José de la Isla

HOUSTON — In the early 1980s, Frank Espada set out to capture, through pictures and words, the story about why so many people left their Caribbean homeland and where they went. The result is a traveling gallery of photographs that has toured much of the United States. Now there’s the book, “The Puerto Rican Diaspora: Themes in the Survival of a People.”

Espada himself is part of that diaspora. Now 77, he approaches getting the story across at a time when conventional ways have become sclerotic, where not much ofimportance gets through. It takes imagination to get reality out.

The Puerto Rican exodus started at the beginning of the 20th century when the United States acquired the island at the end of the Spanish-American War of 1898. A devastating hurricane hit the island the following year.

By 1901, 5,000 Puerto Ricans had already migrated to Hawaii, lured to do back-breaking, strike-busting work in the sugar industry. The same industry had squeezed Puerto Rico from near self-sufficiency to dependency on sugar as a cash crop. Land tenure increasingly moved into the hands of foreign investors and local elites. These were the catalytic elements to the 50 years of exodus.

People fled to places where security and family wellbeing were a prospect. Sixty communities with 10,000 or more Puerto Ricans exist today on the U.S’ mainland. Among the first destinations were Hawaii and East New York.

The conditions in reaching Hawaii were often horrendous.Those who know about the lives of migrant workers are familiar with the lifecycle of a promised-land myth and hell to pay getting there.

For a few there was escape and renewal. Some jumped ship en route to start life anew in San Francisco, For those who reached the Hawaiian cane fields there were abuses, humiliations and beatings in an existence best described as indentured servitude. Many of the émigrés’ descendants live today along Hawaii’s Kona Coast. Espada’s pages include the face of Santa Rodriguez, who explains she was born 70 years ago and has never been to Puerto Rico “to see where my parents came from.” Yet, “I still feel very Puerto Rican.”

Another descendant, Rodney Morales says, “Me, my sisters, brothers — we grew up in a world where there are not many Puerto Ricans around. My brother’s wife is Hawaiian/Chinese/Haole. My younger sister is married to a black; my older sister is married to a Filipino. Their kids are all mixed up.”

In that sense, so too is the whole world.

On page 40, in the section on East New York, there’s a 1965 photo of Agropino Bonillo in a fedora. The sidebar on the next page tells you he was 57, worked two jobs, lived in a bad-ass apartment house and was mugged on the way home one night. He was dead the next morning.

Several thousand people participated in a candlelight procession through the neighborhood. Where Agropino Bonillo fell, a box filled up quickly with flowers and dollars and coins. The community grief led to a call to action.

On the rest of the page, Frank’s acclaimed poet son Martin writes a literary version of the same facts: “a reminder of the wakes too many and too soon.” A woman “slick in a drizzle of tears” drops some money in the box.

Three weeks later, when a black youngster in New Lots was killed, blacks and Puerto Ricans were pitted in the urban jungle against Italians. Several people were killed.

“Many promises were made but soon forgotten,” Frank wrote about the Agropino Bonillo incident.

This, he suggests, is what led to the urban disturbance. “And the beat goes on,” he concludes.

Frank Espada (www. frankespada.com) was for many years a key activist on the New York civil rights and community development scene. During that era, few events in the formation of a national Latino identity occurred without him. He later moved to San Francisco where he taught photography at the University of California, Berkeley, Extension Program.

Espada’s book is a testament to how art, not only photojournalism, can open up readers’ consciousness to truth. That’s where reality comes from and what makes the beat go on.

[José de la Isla, author of “The Rise of Hispanic Political Power” (Archer Books, 2003) writes a weekly commentary for Hispanic Link News Service. E-mail joseisla3@yahoo.com. © 2007

Does the ability of a president to speak a second language, makes a difference?

­by Frank Gómez

Few U.S. presidents have had second language skills. Does it matter? Beyond appealing to the Hispanic vote in the 2008 elections, is a second language important to our global leadership and competitiveness?

Thomas Jefferson, onetime envoy to France, spoke French well. Did his language skill and understanding of the French people help in negotiating the Louisiana Purchase? We may never know; but since Jefferson no U.S. president has had a command of a second language.

Jimmy Carter, who as Georgia’s governor supported Partners of the Americas programs between Georgia and Costa Rica, spoke limited Spanish. Ronald Reagan was fond of saying “Mi casa es su casa,” and named his home “Rancho del Cielo” (Ranch in the Sky). But he did not speak Spanish. Bill Clinton connected easily with people around the world, sometimes uttering a word or two of Spanish or another language, but he spoke only English.

George W. Bush, raised among Hispanic workers in west Texas oilfields, has convinced some who know no better that he can communicate in Spanish; but after the pleasantries – as his recent Latin American tour illustrated – he is sorely limited.

Enter Bill Richardson, an honest-to-goodness Hispanic candidate for the Democratic nomination for president. With a Mexican mother and a U.S. father who was born in Nicaragua, Richardson was born in Pasadena, Calif., but spent much of his youth in Mexico City with his family. He speaks Spanish and speaks it well.

A second announced candidate in the Democratic primary, Sen. Chris Dodd of Connecticut, a former Peace Corps volunteer, speaks Spanish fairly well. The question, again, is does it matter?

Richardson says it does. Biculturalism, he believes, is an attribute that enables him to penetrate others’ psyches, to appreciate others’ values and perceptions.

Four times nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, he has negotiated the release of prisoners and confronted “Axis of Evil” bad guys “up close and personal.” Early this year he negotiated a cease fire in the Sudan that allowed people in Darfur to obtain help.

He did not speak Spanish in Korea, Iraq, Syria, Darfur and other places. But with a combination of bonhomie and steely resolve, he has shown an unHoyaparalleled ability to engage tyrants and autocrats and work the will of humanity. He was an extraordinarily effective ambassador to the United Nations, crediting his biculturalism with the ability to cross political and linguistic barriers.

Richardson is a big, slightly overweight, self-deprecating, back-slapping, hand-shaking, joke-making kind of guy who relates to people of any station. He can work a room like nobody’s business, connecting with everyone from waiters to prime ministers. But behind the smile and the warm embraces is a man who communicates effectively across cultures.

A few years ago, Richardson negotiated the release of Cuban political prisoners. At first cold and distant, Castro warmed to him as they discussed baseball. “Baseball diplomacy,” as Richardson calls it, facilitated communication. He found a way – quite beyond his language skills.

Given an increasingly complex and shrinking world, will skill in engaging foreign leaders be recognized as an important attribute for a 21st century president? And can cross-cultural communications be useful within our own increasingly multicultural society? Will language and culture be factors in debates and in the minds of voters?

Bill Richardson is just beginning to get the attention his résumé merits. A Sunday morning talk show pundit predicted recently – a sign of the times – that debates on Spanish language television are going to be part of this election. That may be good for the Hispanic vote, but the United States needs to communicate well internationally to earn the respect of leaders and people around the world. The skills Governor Richardson offers should be taken seriously.

(Frank Gómez is a retired career Foreign Service Officer and former adjunct professor of international relations at New York University.) © 2007.

We celebrate important events in May

by Marvin J. Ramírez

From The Editor Marvin J. RamirezFrom The Editor Marvin J. Ramírez

As we continue celebrating Cinco de Mayo, and with Mother’s Day at our doorstep – on May 13th – we are still celebrating at El Reportero. This is our 16th Anniversary bringing the Latino community news in Spanish and English. It is our way of building a bridge between our homeland and our current home.

As we progress into the 21th century, El Reportero is gaining more and more recognition as the independent Latino news source with a unique angle of our countries’ peoples’ interest, including our layout -and format, which seems to be imitated more and more by others.

As many of our readers can see, we don’t need color pages, and many have complemented El Reportero recently for looking so good in black and white, after sporadically publishing in color – when our sponsors ask for it.

And many have also complemented us for having substance in our news content, and being truly connected to our goals and needs as a community.

We emphasize, that in order to offer you bigger editions, with more content, we ask for your help as our dedicated readers. We need you to patronize our advertisers by eating in their restaurants and using their professional services. And you can tell them that you are there because you saw their ad in El Reportero.

It’s very important that all of you, as a community who share values and similar experiences, with one same language, religion; and goals, support this newspaper which really stand up in your defense when they are taking or threatening your rights, and publishes your successes and achievements, and make them responsibly part of history on the pages of the newspaper.

We continue to thank you all for supporting us in our effort to serve you. And please start thinking what you will give to your mother in her day.

We invite you to place an ad during our anniversary celebration serving the Latino community, your business will have more visibility and you will contribute to a free and independent Latino press. And to those who don’t own a business, simply let us place your business card in our commemorative edition, so you can also be part of helping the cause of journalism and El Reportero.

California rallies for immigrant rights, police repress L.A. protest

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

Who gave the order: LAPDs beat an unarmed man during a May 1st march.Who gave the order: LAPDs beat an unarmed man during a May 1st march. ( PHOTOS BY LAT )

On May 1, International Workers Day, tens of thousands of protesters participated in mass marches for immigrant rights in California and around the United States. While Bay Area rallies peacefully brought diverse groups together and drew attention to the more than 1,500 local raids on illegal immigrants in recent months, a Los Angeles event ended in violence. Both northern and southern California reported much smaller turnouts than last year’s record-breaking protests.

The L.A. clashes started around 6 p.m. in MacArthur Park, at the city’s second event of the day, when crowds had thinned from approximately 25,000 to 10,000. Police wielding batons and firing 240 rubber bullets tried to disperse demonstrators who moved into a street, according to rally organizers and reporters. Authorities said several people threw rocks and bottles at officers, who used batons and tear gas to push the crowd back to the sidewalk and then cleared the park.

“There were 240 rounds shot and not one arrest, so where was the threat?” asked organizer Victor Narro of the National Lawyers Guild. “I saw police officers laughing on the street while this was going on.”

News images showed police hitting TV journalists, shoving people who were walking away from officers, and injuries people suffered from rubber bullets.

“They were pushing children, elderly, mothers with their babies and beating up on the media,” said Angela Sanbrano, an organizer.

“The cops didn’t only move people out of the perimeters of the park, they chased through the park firing at anyone who might have been an obstacle, said Ernesto Arce, an organizer and radio host who was hit in the leg with a rubber-coated bullet during the conflict. “I witnessed many people who were shot at from the back,” according to media reports.

L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who cut short his trip to Central America and Mexico in the wake of the problems at the protests, said he would welcome the FBI’s investigation into the violence at the end of mostly peaceful immigrant rights marches and rallies.

Police Chief William J. Bratton condemned the officers’ tactics and said the department’s investigation, which will review police and news media videos, would focus on the actions not only of the street officers but also of the top decision-makers who gave the orders.

“There were mistakes made here all the way up and down the line. I want to make that clear,” Bratton said at a news conference. He also mentioned that he had talked with the head of the FBI’s Los Angeles office and would meet with him next week to “speak to the issues that occurred May 1 and also the idea of possibly having the FBI take a look at this.”

The chief said he hoped a federal review would show the department has nothing to hide while dispelling any claims that police had targeted immigrant rights leaders and supporters.

The several thousand activists who turned out in San Francisco that day carried flags from both the U.S. and Latin American nations, marching up Market Street to the Civic Center rally.

“This is not a movement of politicians, but of human beings — and that’s why it will be successful,” said Matt Gonzalez, a former president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. “The laws of this country will not change unless we stay united,” according to news accounts.

A morning march in Oakland down International Boulevard was led by a banner reading: “No mas tratamiento de segunda clase,” or “No more second-class ­treatment,” and covered 15 blocks.

The nationwide protests, school and store closings and boycotts were meant to show the key role that immigrants both legal and illegal play in the U.S. economy. They were also in protest of an immigration reform bill passed by the House in December, which would make illegal immigration an aggravated felony and erect 700 miles of fence on the U.S.-Mexican border. California is home to about one-quarter of the nation’s immigrants.

(Servicios de noticias de cabl\e contribuiyeron con este reportaje).

Brazil gets tough on energy

by the El Reportero news services

Chávez and MoralesChávez and Morales

BRAZIL – Despite official denials, Brazil’s relations with neighbouring Venezuela and Bolivia have soured in the past month. The courteous manners of Presidents Lula da Silva, Hugo Chávez and Evo Morales during the first ever South American energy summit in mid-April did little to hide growing political differences. Indeed, behind the scenes, the Brazilian government sent a tough message to Venezuela and Bolivia, reasserting Brazil’s leadership in the region.

Government compares narcos to al-Qaida

MEXICO: Genaro García Luna, the security minister, said on 25 April that drug gangs were imitating al-Qaida, an Islamic terrorist organisation. García Luna was speaking on the eve of today’s testimony by the defence minister, Guillermo Galván Galván, to congress. The government has launched offensives against the narcos in nine of Mexico’s 32 states, but these offensives have, so far, achieved little: the murder rate in the states where the government has deployed 30,000 troops is up by about 40% so far this year.

Experts: U.S. spies are often in the dark on Cuba

WASHINGTON – American spies don’t know much about what’s happening in Havana as Fidel Castro appears to be growing more active. U.S. reports that he has cancer increasingly seem off the mark, questioning just how much American spies know.

Regardless of having so many sophisticated spy satellites,\the U.S. intelligence community is now too shellshocked from past intelligence setbacks on Cuba and the Iraq weapons of mass destruction debacle to aggressively spy on the island, some Cuba observers say.

“Washington, as a result, is now largely ignorant of what is happening within the inner circles in Havana as Cuba undergoes a transfer of power from Castro to his brother Raul,” according to several people familiar with U.S. intelligence on the island, reported the McClatchy Newspapers.

The U.S. intelligence community’s current assessment is that Castro is more ill than Havana is admitting, and that change in Cuba is unlikely in the near term, though a power struggle is possible further down the road.

But nearly a dozen people knowledgeable about U.S. intelligence on Cuba – who all spoke only on condition of anonymity to discuss classified materials – painted a mixed picture of the capability to spy on Cuba.

N.Y. mayor explores Mexico for anti-poverty ideas

MEXICO CITY – New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg got a firsthand look Tuesday April 24, at an anti-poverty program that gives cash grants to poor Mexican families for keeping their children in school and providing regular medical care, looking for tips he might adopt back home.

Mexico’s Oportunidades program has been lauded as a model because it focuses on breaking the cycle of poverty by investing in long-term development.

Bloomberg, who has started a similar pilot program, Opportunity NYC, to help New Yorkers break the cycle of poverty, said he was looking for ways to enhance it.

Oportunidades began operating in poor rural regions in 1997 under the name of Progresa. It later expanded to cities.

The program gives families cash grants to help pay for their children’s schooling and to compensate for what the children would have earned if they were taken out of school and put to work, the traditional option in poor regions of Mexico.

Oportunidades also provides basic health care, including preventive services, for entire families as well as cash to buy food.

(Associated Press and McClatchy Newspapers contributed to this article.)

State legislators indroduce 1,169 bills on immigration, twice total for all ’06

by Alex Meneses Miyashita

Felix OrtizFelix Ortiz

State lawmakers have introduced more than 1,000 immigration bills so far this year’ which more than doubles the amount of immigration legislation introduced at the state level in 2006, according to a tally by the National Conference of State Legislatures.

It claims there are at least 1,169 bills and resolutions which have been introduced this year.

This far into the calendar year 12 months ago the number of bills introduced was about two-thirds less.

In all of 2006, 570 immigration bills were introduced. So far, 57 bills have passed.

The NCSL says these trends reflect the need to address immigration reform upon the absence of federal action.

“Washington’s inability to reach consensus has forced states to roll up their sleeves and get the job done,” stated NCSL president Leticia Van de Putte.

The conference is pressing the federal government to act on immigration reform.

“States can only do so much,” Van de Putte stated. “It’s like we’re trying to scale a 12foot wall with a step stool. The federal government must fix and fund the problem, now.”

Funding concerns have driven 17 states to pass resolutions against the REAL ID Act of 2005, which sets national standards for driver’s licenses and requires all applicants to prove legal status.

New York State Assemblyman Fé1ix Ortiz, also president of the National Hispanic Caucus of State Legislators, told Weekly Report in February that it would cost his state alone some $200 million to implement the law—about f ve times what was federally appropriated.

“We are not getting a mandate imposed on us without funding,” he said.

Latino and civil rights groups claim the law would harm undocumented immigrants. While several of the bills listed by the NCSL in its preliminary analysis would include certain benefits to undocumented immigrants, the great majority of the legislative proposals would penalize them.

The state bills most commonly range from restricting services for undocumented immigrants, penalizing employers for hiring them, allowing state and local police to enter a federal program to enforce immigration law and requiring proof of citizenship to vote, among others.

Legislation extending benefits to undocumented immigrants commonly range from granting them driving certificates and in-state school tuition and funding English language learning programs.

Oklahoma, Missouri, South Carolina and Tennessee have introduced comprehensive proposals as defined by the NCSL. These address several elements and target un documented immigrants and employers who hire them.

Most recently, the Oklahoma state Senate passed 41-6 legislation which has been reported as one of the country’s most restrictive bills against undocumented immigrants.

­It penalizes employers hiring them, criminalizes harboring or sheltering them, strips public benefits away from them and allows local police to enter a federal program to enforce immigration law.

Sen. James Williamson, the author of the bill, stated it was “a fair, even-handed approach to problems Oklahoma is facing as a result of illegal immigration.”

Opponents offer an alternative view. They call it mean in spirit.

Additional preliminary findings of the NOSL report are available at www.ncsl.org.

Hispanic Link.