Editorial: Wheels Coming Off Ala.’s Anti-Immigrant Law

From The Anniston Star:

By The Anniston Star Editorial Board

Dec 09, 2011

This week began with Gov. Robert Bentley expressing concern that Alabama’s draconian illegal-immigration law could hurt recruitment of foreign industries. This was quite an admission from the man who supported the bill from the time it was in the Legislature until he signed it into law.

Now he has reached out to foreign corporate executives to let them know they are welcome in Alabama.

“We are not anti-foreign companies,” the governor told the Associated Press. “We are very pro-foreign companies.”

So it follows that if Alabama is not against foreign companies and the foreign executives who run them, it must be against foreign workers, many of whom are Hispanic.

They are the law’s target group. That dirty secret is out.

Meanwhile, in Mobile, Alabama Commissioner of Agriculture John McMillan has met with farmers. Their future depends on what one in attendance called “a sustainable work force,” something the suggested immigrant replacements — prisoners, ex-convicts and the unemployed — will not provide.

However, the clearest indication this week that the law is coming apart is a memo from Attorney General Luther Strange to House Speaker Mike Hubbard and Senate President Pro Tem Del Marsh. Asked his opinion of the law, Strange wrote that if he is going to defend the state in court, the law will need more than the “tweaking” Hubbard had suggested.

In the opinion of the attorney general, most of the sections of the law that have been put on hold by a federal court should be repealed.

• Churches should be exempt from prosecution for helping illegal immigrants.

• Schools should not be required to gather immigration data.

• The part of the law that allows individuals to sue public officials who do not enforce the law should be dropped.

In all, Strange’s proposals cover nearly one-third of the law’s 32 sections.

If these things were done, Strange feels he can defend the rest in court.

It’s predictable that Sen. Scott Beason, R-Gardendale, the bill’s co-sponsor and one of its staunchest defenders, expressed concern that Strange’s proposals would weaken the law. Hubbard spokesman Todd Stacy has echoed Beason’s sentiment. “Make no mistake,” Stacy said, “the Legislature is not going to repeal this law and have Alabama become a sanctuary state for illegal immigrants.”

Of course, Alabama was not a sanctuary state before the law, which returns us to the question of why it was passed in the first place.

In their rush to address an emotional issue with an emotional response, Alabama legislators wrote a bad bill that is hurting the state on many levels. The best way to repair the damage is to repeal the bill and return to the issue rationally — either in a special session or when the Legislature meets next year.

Unfortunately, a rational return to an emotional issue is not the way the Alabama Legislature approaches legislation. Given that bit of reality, the changes that Strange has proposed seem the logical course of action.

Ala. Loses Immigrant Labor As Crops Rots In Fields

From AL.com:

John McMillan, commissioner of state Agriculture and Industries. (Huntsville Times file photo)

By Challen Stephens, The Huntsville Times

Published: Monday, September 26, 2011, 4:05 PM

Regardless of how a federal judge rules this week, Alabama’s new immigration law has already delivered “unintended consequences” across the state, said Agriculture Commissioner John McMillan.

The picking of blueberries, tomatoes and squash largely requires hand labor, McMillan said Monday, and the work is no longer getting done.

McMillan said he recently visited a farmer who has 75 acres of squash in north Jackson County.

“It was just rotting in the fields because he had half the labor,” McMillan told The Huntsville Times editorial board. “That’s a fact. What I’m telling you is what I’ve seen.”

In June, the new Republican majority in Montgomery passed a sweeping 72-page act that is widely considered the toughest crackdown on illegal immigration in the country. The act not only allows local police to detain people suspected of being in the country illegally, the law also makes it a crime for illegal immigrants to look for work in Alabama. (more…)

AL’s (Blocked) Law Of Unintended Consequences

From The Press-Register (of Mobile, AL):

John McMillan, Alabama’s agriculture commissioner, says “there’s no question we overreached,” with the state’s tough new anti-immigration law. (The Huntsville Times/Michael Mercier)

By George Talbot

Its official title is the Alabama Taxpayer and Citizen Protection Act, but the state’s controversial new regulations cracking down on illegal immigration might be better known as the law of unintended consequences.

The act, approved by the Legislature in June, is touted by its Republican sponsors as the toughest anti-illegal immigration law in the country. But while winning praise from conservative voters — some, in fact, have complained that the law doesn’t go far enough — it’s drawn a backlash of criticism by everyone from poultry farmers and police chiefs to bank executives and Baptist ministers.

Led by Gov. Robert Bentley, who campaigned on a platform that included an Arizona-style immigration law, the Legislature sought to address the state’s growing number of undocumented workers.

That population, lawmakers said, was contributing to Alabama’s high rate of unemployment, depressing wages for workers and raising the state’s costs for health care, education and other social services.

But while the law is aimed at illegal aliens, plenty of others are caught in the crossfire.

“There’s no question we over-reached,” said Alabama Agriculture Commissioner John McMillan. “I don’t have any hard statistics, but the evidence clearly points to a remarkable drop in day laborers throughout Alabama.”

McMillan, a Republican and former state representative from Stockton, said he got an up-close view of the problem as he visited with farmers in Escambia County on Tuesday.

Produce, he said, is going unpicked, and a bumper crop of peanuts could be lost to rot if new workers aren’t found in a hurry.

McMillan, who holds an economics degree from Rhodes College, said he supports efforts to tighten U.S. borders, but that the new immigration law will come at a price.

“The fact is, if you eat a fruit, a vegetable or a piece of chicken, an immigrant probably touched it before it got to your plate,” he said. “So it doesn’t take an economist to figure that this is going to have a major impact on consumers.”

The irony is that the labor crisis is coming at a time when Alabama faces a steep unemployment rate of 10 percent. That’s led to the stark realization that Alabama, where generations prized the virtue of a hard day’s labor, has lost its blue collar ethic. (more…)

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