california republic | theonerepublic
Shelving
the California Border Police
Enforcing
The Law Is The Right Thing To Do…
[by Ray
Haynes] 8/1/05 theonerepublic
My Democrat
colleagues on the Assembly Judiciary Committee recently killed
ACA 20, the constitutional amendment designed to create the California
Border Police, a state agency whose sole purpose, if we can ever get it
formed, would be the comprehensive, uniform, and statewide enforcement
of federal immigration law. The full text of ACA 20, in its current form,
is available on www.calborderpolice.com if
you would like to see exactly what the bill would do. Within two weeks
of the death of the bill, the
Attorney General also released his title and summary of an initiative with
the same language as ACA 20. That initiative is now out for signature gathering,
so the people may have the opportunity to enact the terms of ACA 20 over
the objection of the liberal majority of the California Legislature. Only
time will tell on that account.
Contributor
Ray Haynes
Mr.
Haynes is an Assembly member representing Riverside
and Temecula. He serves on the Appropriations and
Budget Committees. [go to Assembly Member Haynes website
at California Assembly][go to Haynes index] |
However,
I was intrigued by the arguments used by the opposition to
the idea of the California Border Police.
These arguments
generally fall into three general categories: (1) The California
Border Police would cost California taxpayers too much money;
(2) Patrolling the border is a federal job, and only the federal
government should do it; and (3) Illegal aliens do jobs that
Americans won’t do, so stopping the flow of illegals would
destroy our economy. Those arguments persuaded the Democrats
on the committee to vote against my bill. I’d like to address
those arguments.
First—the Border Police will cost too
much money. I wish that my Democrat colleagues worried this
much about the cost
of illegal immigration back in 1999 when they gave illegals free
medical care in California. California taxpayers now spend about
$4 billion a year on the cost of free medical care for illegal
aliens.
More important, the total cost of illegal immigration
to California taxpayers is approximately $10 billion a year,
when education,
welfare, health care, and prison costs are combined. The California
Border Police will cost between $200 and 300 million a year,
but will reduce our social service costs by between $3 to 4 billion
a year. That is a bargain. In addition, that $300 million is
only 3% of the $9 billion increase in the 05-06 budget over the
04-05 budget, 3/10ths of 1% of total state spending. We really
can’t afford not to do it.
Second—enforcing immigration law is a federal responsibility.
The federal government isn’t doing its job. Federal law
grants the states the authority to enforce the law, and since
the California taxpayer pays a disproportionate share of the
cost of illegal immigration, California should do everything
in its power to reduce those costs.
Finally—illegals may do jobs Americans won’t
do, but they live a life of fear, abuse and exploitation. It
is not
right that human smugglers endanger their lives, and that American
employers exploit their labor with substandard wages or working
conditions. It is not right that criminals target illegals, who
cannot report a crime for fear of deportation. It is not right
that illegals pay into a social security system in which they
will never participate, or get injured on the job without compensation,
all for fear of deportation. They should come to this country
legally, and enjoy the safety and protection of our laws. Those
who justify the current condition, including many of my liberal
colleagues, are actually advocating that illegals continue to
live in these subhuman conditions indefinitely.
Enforcing the law is right for everyone. It is right for Californians,
it is right for the federal government, and just as important,
it is right for the long term good of the illegal. That is why
we need the California Border Police, and why I am supporting
the initiative. If we just do the right thing first, everything
else will fall into place. CRO
Mr.
Haynes is a California Assembleyman representing Riverside
and Temecula and frequent contributor to CaliforniaRepublic.org.
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