Ala. Immigration Law Targets Students

From The Center For American Progress:

By Natalia Mercado Violand |July 22, 2011

Just when it seemed Alabama had left its dark past of segregation behind, its legislature passed one of the nation’s strictest anti-immigration bills, H.B. 56, taking the state back in time 50 years.

During the civil rights struggles, Birmingham, Alabama, was the epicenter of the civil rights movement’s struggles for equality. It was known for having one of the most violent, aggressive, and pro-segregation police forces and one of most hostile education systems in the nation. Today, in a setting that is all too familiar, H.B. 56 reestablishes the educational racial barriers Alabama supposedly put in its past.

Gov. Robert Bentley (R) signed H.B. 56 into law on June 9, 2011, an anti-immigration bill even harsher than Arizona’s infamous S.B. 1070. Like S.B. 1070, the bill allows police to arrest anyone suspected of being an illegal immigrant even if they’re stopped for a minimal traffic violation. The bill makes it a criminal offense in Alabama to rent a house or apartment to undocumented immigrants or to knowingly give an undocumented immigrant a ride. It also makes E-Verify, a faulty and expensive Internet-based verification mechanism, mandatory for employers.

But worst of all is that the law turns educators into immigration officials. Going even beyond Arizona, the law targets students and requires that schools collect information about the legal status of students and their parents. This law will lead inevitably to widespread racial profiling in education as in law enforcement. (more…)

DREAM Act Gaining Strength In North Carolina

From Fox Charlotte:

ISRAEL BALDERAS–Jul 19, 2011 at 11:13 PM EDT

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Immigration enforcement or reform? The national debate plays out inside a Charlotte immigration courtroom. If an individual is undocumented and caught, the person should be deported under U.S. immigration laws. That’s the reality 22 year-old Erick Velazquillo faces.

“It is nerve racking, knowing that I’ve spent my entire life here, and I came here at the age of 2,” said Velazquillo. The former South Mecklenburg High School student says he’s scared to know there’s a real possibility of having to return to Mexico, where he was born.

But those that support tough immigration enforcement say that’s exactly what should happened to Velazquillo because he is not abiding by U.S. immigration laws.

On Tuesday afternoon, Velazquillo faced an immigration hearing because he’s not a American citizen, even though he’s been living as a U.S. resident for 20 years. (more…)

Locked-Up Indefinitely

From Politico:

Lamar Smith’s bill could prevent immigrants from challenging their detention,  the author writes. | AP Photo

By LAURA MURPHY | 7/14/11 9:49 PM EDT

Amadou Diouf came to the United States 15 years ago seeking, like so many before him, a small piece of the American dream. But his became a nightmare when he was arrested and thrown into immigration detention in 2003 for overstaying his visa.

Despite Diouf’s marriage to a U.S. citizen, and his productive life in the United States, immigration authorities justified his detention, in part, by claiming he had a “lack of family support.” Diouf was locked up for two years before finally being granted a hearing before an immigration judge. The court determined he was neither a danger to the community nor a flight risk and could be safely released.

But others like Diouf would not be so lucky under the provisions of a bill recently introduced by the House Judiciary Committee chairman, Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Texas). That bill could strip immigrants of any opportunity to challenge their detention in front of a judge and does nothing to address the serious issues of delay and lack of resources that plague the immigration court system. It sweeps broadly, and would require the Department of Homeland Security to detain a large swath of immigrants — many with no criminal history at all. (more…)

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