By DANIELLE ULMAN
Capital News Service
WASHINGTON
- A resolution passed in Virginia's
Prince William County last week to crack
down on illegal immigrants might bring a
mass relocation to welcoming states like
Maryland, experts said.
The law bars
illegal immigrants from obtaining
business licenses and using services for
the homeless, elderly and drug-addicted.
In addition, police must check suspects'
immigration status if there is reason to
believe they are here illegally.
Full funding for the law has not yet
been approved, so the effective date of
the legislation has been delayed. Still,
publicity about the law and its future
enforcement may be enough to prompt some
to uproot.
"They're
absolutely coming. Some of the police
officers in my district have said
they've seen an increase in Virginia
license plates driving around," said
Will Campos, Prince George's County
Council member. "It doesn't mean they're
moving here, but they're browsing."
Campos attributed
Prince George's tolerance of immigrants
to its minority majority population.
"I believe
we're a little more progressive in
thinking and a little more open to
immigration," he said. "There are things
that can be compromised and worked out
as opposed to completely shutting the
door and running scare tactics like
they're doing in other places."
Maryland is
not the most permissive state when it
comes to immigration, said immigration
expert William Hanna, however it "is
probably in the top half of states in
the United States that have been more
receptive," to immigrants.
"Some people will
obviously be inclined to move to places
where they won't be harassed," said the
University of Maryland, College Park
professor.
Maryland has
generally been more relaxed about
illegal immigration than Virginia. For
example, it is one of only nine states
that doesn't check immigration status
before issuing a driver's license.
"We have a
growing immigrant community in Maryland
that's made its economy number one,"
said Delegate Victor Ramirez, D-Prince
George's. That strong economy could draw
people to Maryland, he said.
"You're going
to start to see folks (in Prince William
County) spending their money somewhere
else," he said. "It's not just about
illegal immigrants, it's about legal
immigrants. Why invest money in a county
that preaches, to a certain extent,
hate?"
Ramirez
proposed legislation in January to grant
illegal immigrants in-state tuition for
public colleges and universities. The
bill received initial support, but has
been shelved since the General Assembly
recessed in April.
Unlike Prince
William County, the Montgomery County
Council unanimously rejected immigration
enforcement training. The federal
program has U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement agents training county
police officers to conduct residency
status checks on criminal suspects.
"To go down the
road that a few counties have done in
Northern Virginia -- Loudoun and Prince
William -- is expensive,
counterproductive and leads to the
harassment of our neighbors," Council
Member George Leventhal said at a Sept.
26 town hall meeting.
Takoma Park
actually passed a law in 1985 forbidding
its police from checking immigration
status and then, on Oct. 15, rejected
Police Chief Ronald Ricucci's
recommendation to loosen that
restriction and allow officers to arrest
felons who were deported, but returned
to the United States.
"Even a fairly
narrow amendment would probably erode
the trust of the immigrants in the
city," said Takoma Park Mayor Kathy
Porter.
"I think the
way to keep the community safe is to
work with the immigrant communities so
that they feel comfortable calling the
police and alerting the police to
illegal behavior."
The city even
allows non-U.S. citizens to vote in its
elections.
As for more
immigrants moving to Maryland, Porter
said, "it's not been a worry because we
welcome immigrants to our community."
Immigration became
a state concern after Congress failed to
pass large-scale immigration reform this
summer. And many communities are now
trying to take matters into their own
hands.
Frederick County
Commissioner Charles Jenkins's recent
attempt to deny public services like
schooling to illegal immigrants failed.
"In Maryland we
continue to be a sanctuary state," he
said. "Until we start to do the things I
was hoping to get done, we're going to
continue to see the impact."
The state
makes it "so easy and so inviting" for
illegal immigrants to live in Maryland,
Jenkins said. "It's sort of like water;
water takes the path of least
resistance."
The Virginia group
Mexicans without Borders has received
many calls from worried residents since
the Oct. 17 vote, said Nancy Lyall, a
legal coordinator with the group.
"We're advising
people to remain calm and assess the
situation," she said. "We don't want
people to get up and move before we see
this through."
While no one that
Lyall knows has left Virginia yet, she
said she has received frantic calls from
people afraid to send their children to
school or go to the doctor's office.
"There are a
lot of misconceptions about the
resolution," she said. "There's a
tremendous amount of fear."