Alabama immigrants flee after judge upholds harsh immigration law
Alabama statute causes many to move; kids not at school
In a Monday, Oct. 3, 2011 photo, tomato farmer Leroy Smith, second from left, talks with State Sen. Scott Beason, R-Gardendale, in Steele, Ala. Only a few of Smith's field workers showed up for work after Alabama's new immigration law took effect last week. Hispanic workers and their children are fleeing Alabama or going into hiding because of the state's strict new immigration law, which will surely deal a significant blow to the state's economy and may slow the rebuilding of Tuscaloosa and other tornado-damaged cities. The impact is being felt from construction sites to farms and schools, and it's driven by fears of being jailed and held without bond if police should catch them without the proper documentation. (AP Photo/Dave Martin)
Associated Press
Alabama Hispanics are taking their children out of school, packing up their cars and fleeing the state after a judge last week gave the go ahead for what some have called the toughest immigration law in the country.
The exodus started just hours after Judge Sharon Lovelace Blackburn upheld controversial parts of the state's immigration solution, including provisions that require schools to inquire about immigration status when registering children and gave state and local police the power to ask for immigration papers during routine traffic stops. The law, which the governor called "the strongest immigration law in the country," went into effect immediately, the New York Times reported.
In Albertville, Ala., residents who had lived in the neighborhood for 10 years were packed up and gone within a matter of days, selling fully furnished mobile homes for $1,000 or less. John Weathers, who rents and has sold houses to many Hispanic residents in the area, said his occupancy has dropped by a quarter since the ruling. Volunteers at an immigrant-rights group hot line told the New York Times they fielded more than 1,000 phone calls over the weekend from pregnant women afraid to go the hopsital, crime victims afraid to go to the police and parents afraid to go to school.
More than 2,250 Hispanic students didn't show up for school in Alabama Monday, Politico reported. That's double routine absentee rates. Cindy Warner, public relations supervisor for the Shelby County school system told Politico she has observed "fear and panic" from parents since the ruling.
Warner, like other Alabama school officials, several of whom have gone on TV to plead with parents to keep children in school, emphasized that the law does not change things for children who are already enrolled.
"We are working really hard to try to get information home to those parents to help calm those fears down," she said. "If your child is already enrolled in school, it doesn't apply to you. They will still be enrolled — federal law states that we cannot block their enrollment and must still continue to serve them. The issue will be that there will be one extra step in the reporting process — that we'll report to the state department the number of students who couldn't provide birth certificates."
Conservative blogs have praised the ruling, saying the exodus shoots down the argument that the country must offer amnesty because there is no way to deport all the undocumented immigrants.
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