Many local government officials in Georgia ignoring immigration law – business licenses are a “public benefit”
I am very proud that an edited version of this appeared on Dick Pettys’ Insider Advantage Georgia today – and thank Mr. Pettys for the space. Insider Advantage is a subscription Website.
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âThere oughtâa be a lawâ. Most of us have muttered that all-too familiar phrase a few times in our lives.
On the topic of illegal immigration, illegal employment and illegal access to public benefits, in twenty-first century Georgia, we need to add âand it should be enforcedâ.
On those issues, there is a Georgia law.
In April, 2006 state Senator Chip Rogers (R- Woodstock) was successful in getting his Georgia Security and Immigration Compliance Act (SB 529) signed into law. Those involved in lobbying for the badly needed regulation were acutely aware of the cynicism of many citizens who remarked that âeven if it passes, it wonât be enforcedâ.
Few involved in fighting for the bill could have guessed at the time that not only would they be partially correct, but that it would be many of the elected officials in Georgiaâs local governments who would be among the violators â and that the media would ignore the issue.
Essentially, Rogersâ law, which went into effect July 1, 2007, is an effort to require compliance with long standing federal immigration and employment law here in Georgia by using available federal tools.
Section 2 of SB 529 stipulates that all public employers â the state of Georgia itself, municipalities and county governments and in stages, their contractors – must use the no-cost federal employment verification data-base now called E-Verify to validate the work eligibility of all newly hired employees.
Voters who will decide in November who will operate their local governments should be very interested to learn that of the 500-plus cities and towns and 159 counties in our state, according to an April 23rd Department of Homeland Security list of E-Verify users in Georgia, many counties have not yet obtained authority from the feds to use E-Verify.
At less than 50%, the number of municipalities on the list E-Verify is even more dismal.
One must wonder how many illegal aliens have been hired by the governments that are in violation of the state law that says we must obey the federal law.
In an effort to protect the limited amount of taxpayer funds on hand for providing public benefits, Senator Rogers designed section 9 of the law to require verification of eligibility of all applicants for those benefits. Again, by using a federal tool. The Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) program reports on the immigration status of applicants names submitted for verification.
The goal here was to be sure that we are not dispensing public dollars to people with no legal right to be in the U.S. while legal residents and Americans are on waiting lists.
It is a masterful plan â but like all laws, meaningless unless enthusiastically enforced.
According to DHS, as of the end of April â nearly a year after Rogersâ law went into effect – a total of 9 (nine!) Georgia entities have either applied for or are authorized to use the very efficient SAVE system.
One must also wonder about the efficiency of the Association of County Commissioners (ACCG) whose Website describes its primary charge as:â to ensure that the counties can provide the necessary leadership, services and programs to meet the health, safety and welfare needs of their citizensâ and the Georgia Municipal Authority – (GMA – âAdvocacy, Service, Innovationâ) in educating their members on compliance.
This long time American listened in amazement not once, but twice, during the last General Assembly session while a lobbyist for the GMA smugly explained to other lobbyists and a legislator that âmost municipalities are not required to use the SAVE programâ.
Georgia county commissions and most â if not all – Georgia cities regulate business licenses in their communities. Apparently the GMA lobbyist is among the many involved in government and the media who are not aware that federal law is clear on defining public benefits. Those benefits include âany professional or commercial license provided by an agency of a State or local governmentâ.
Simply put, while U.S. Border Patrol Agents risk their lives to secure American borders, counties and municipalities in Georgia are encouraging and rewarding the illegal border crossers who escape apprehension by granting them business licenses while ignoring federal law, state law and the tool designed to prevent exactly that scenario.
Perhaps to many in the media all of this sounds a bit âwonkishâ and represents, as one local TV news producer reportedly remarked, âjust another illegal immigration storyâ.
We can only imagine the front page headlines and extended news reports if the same local governments were to ignore the 1982 U.S. Supreme Court decision that requires public funding of the education of illegal alien children or were to defy the 1986 federal law that says American taxpayers must foot the bill for hospitals to provide care to anyone needing emergency treatment regardless of ability to pay, citizenship⌠or immigration status.
The old adage is true: All politics is local. Local politicians who ignore the law will have some explaining to do if their constituents get even a basic education on this one.
Isnât that the mediaâs job?
King is president of the Cobb-based Dustin Inman Society which is opposed to illegal immigration and illegal employment. He lobbied in favor of the Georgia Security and Immigration Compliance Act. The Dustin Inman Society uses the E-Verify system. On the Web: www.TheDustinInmanSociety.org