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  1. #1
    working4change
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    Alabama Senate expected to take up immigration changes

    Alabama Senate expected to take up immigration changes
    9:18 AM, May. 16, 2012 |
    Written by Dave Martin)
    Associated Press

    Opponents of Alabama's immigration bill watch the House action from the viewing balcony during the lawmakers session at the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Ala., Thursday, April 19, 2012. The bill was the first issue on the House's work agenda for the day. The bill makes changes to the law that supporters and opponents have called the toughest crackdown on illegal immigration in the nation. The bill is being pushed by the Republican leadership in the House and Senate. It is mostly opposed by Democrats. Opponents say the new bill doesn't go far enough to address inequities in the immigration law, which they say encourages racial profiling by police officers. (AP Photo/Dave Martin)
    on law, which they say encourages racial profiling by police officers.

    MONTGOMERY — As the Alabama Legislature's regular session draws to a close, the Senate is expected to take up a measure to tweak the state's toughest-in-the-nation immigration law.

    The House passed the changes on April 19. They include clarifying that the law won't prevent religious groups from providing charity to illegal immigrants. They also stop schools from asking for the immigration status of students before they enroll.

    Sen. Scott Beason of Gardendale says he hopes to introduce a substitute bill making fewer changes than the House version.

    Groups calling for the outright repeal of the immigration law plan multiple protests at the Statehouse throughout the day. They will culminate in a vigil at 7 p.m.

    Alabama Senate expected to take up immigration changes | The Montgomery Advertiser | montgomeryadvertiser.com

  2. #2
    working4change
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    Alabama Senate Considers Tweaks to Immigration Law

    Alabama Senate Considers Tweaks to Immigration Law

    Published May 16, 2012

    Fox News Latino



    Rally against House Bill 56 at the Alabama Capitol and Children's March to the Governor's Mansion on Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011, in Montgomery, Ala. (AP Photo/Montgomery Advertiser, Lloyd Gallman)
    Alabama Immigration Farmer.jpg

    Alabama employers say Latinos -- including legal immigrants -- are not showing up at their jobs because of the hostile environment they feel since an immigration law took effect. (AP)

    The Alabama Senate may take up a measure to tweak the state's toughest-in-the-nation immigration law.

    With the legislative session drawing to a close, the House passed the changes on April 19. They include clarifying that the law won't prevent religious groups from providing charity to undocumented immigrants. They also stop schools from asking for the immigration status of students before they enroll.

    Sen. Scott Beason of Gardendale says he hopes to introduce a substitute bill making fewer changes than the House version.

    Part of the bill remain unenforceable due to lawsuits by the Obama administration and others, prompting Gov. Robert Bentley and other GOP leaders to support the proposed tweaking the law.

    Groups calling for the law's outright repeal plan multiple protests at the Statehouse throughout the day. They will culminate in a vigil at 7 p.m.

    Passed last year, the Alabama immigration bill has drawn criticism from the business community. Facing the possibility of labor shortages, some farmers are planting less this year rather than watch crops rot without getting picked.

    "There's too much uncertainty," said Keith Dickie, who farms with his brother on a ridge called Straight Mountain, about 40 miles northeast of Birmingham.

    Based on reporting by the Associated Press.

    Read more: Alabama Senate Considers Tweaks to Immigration Law | Fox News Latino

  3. #3
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    05-16-2012 Alabama Senate approves immigration law revisions Alabama Senate approves immigration law revisions (video) | al.com
    Senators Gerald Dial and Bill Holzclaw voted "No." Senator Trip Pittman "Passed".
    Now you know who NOT to thank!


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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Alabama legislature passes new immigration bill

    Alabama legislature passes new immigration bill

    From Joe Sutton and Gustavo Valdes, CNN
    updated 9:46 PM EDT, Wed May 16, 2012

    (CNN) -- Alabama lawmakers passed a new bill Wednesday aimed at improving the state's controversial immigration law, but critics said the new measure might make things worse.

    Demonstrators protested outside the chambers of the Alabama state House and Senate. Seven of them were arrested, said Justin Cox, staff attorney with the ACLU Immigrants Rights Project.

    The Southern Poverty Law Center's legal director was among those arrested, said Marion Steinfels, a representative of the organization.

    Police could not be immediately reached for comment.

    The center is one of the plaintiffs in a federal lawsuit against Alabama's immigration law.

    The new immigration bill, known as HB 658, was approved by the state House and Senate Wednesday.

    The state's governor will have the final say, with the power to sign the bill into law or veto it.

    "We will conduct a final review of the legislation as passed and make a final decision from there," said Jeremy King, a spokesman for Gov. Robert Bentley. "Governor Bentley's goal is to emerge with an immigration bill that is simplified, clarified, more effective, and more enforceable."

    Alabama Sen. Dick Brewbaker told CNN that the new bill addresses unintended consequences of the state's immigration law, including clarifying the types of documents that can serve as a form of official identification.

    It does not address parts of the law that are at issue in federal courts, he said.

    Critics say parts of the new measure would be even harsher than last year's immigration law, which is known as the toughest in the nation.

    "The new bill preserves most of the law while adding several positions that make it even more dangerous," the Alabama Coalition for Immigrant Justice said in a statement.

    Cox, of the ACLU, said the biggest problem of the new bill was the requirement that the Alabama Department of Homeland Security post online the names of illegal immigrants that appear in state courts.

    The coalition said that provision "amounts to a 'scarlet letter' provision likely to lead to harassment and vigilantism."

    The new measure also includes a provision that allows someone to be detained for up to 48 hours while authorities determine their immigration status.

    "Alabama took a step backward in approving this ill-conceived measure," said Olivia Turner, executive director of the ACLU of Alabama. "Lawmakers were deaf to the concerns of many residents, business owners and police who realize this law is a bad idea. Alabama will continue to pay a severe price for a law that is almost impossible to enforce properly and blatantly unconstitutional."

    House lawmakers voted 68-37 in favor of the Senate's version of the bill Wednesday night.

    Before the vote, several representatives appeared skeptical about the Senate version of the bill. House lawmakers approved a different version of the bill last month.

    Rep. Napoleon Bracy Jr. criticized senators for the proposal, calling it "a totally different bill that no one has had a chance to read that's full of unintended consequences."

    Other lawmakers worried that the measure would negatively affect the state's economy, and expressed concerns about racial profiling.

    But lawmakers backing the bill said it protects the state's residents and helps its economy.

    Alabama's existing law, known as HB 56, has several provisions, including one requiring police who make lawful traffic stops or arrests to try to determine the immigration status of anyone they suspect might be in the country illegally.

    A federal appeals court has blocked some components, however, including one requiring Alabama officials to check the immigration status of children in public schools.

    The Alabama law is one of a number of several state laws aiming to crack down on illegal immigration, and has become part of a nationwide skirmish between state federal officials over who controls immigration enforcement.

    Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments over Arizona's similar immigration measure. A ruling could come in late June, just before the justices recess for the summer.
    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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  5. #5
    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    Once again the MSM slants the article to fully express the concerns of the pro illegal alien enablers while minimizing the legal enforcement side. Lots of ACLU comments.
    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  6. #6
    working4change
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    Lawmakers approve tweaks to Alabama immigration law
    ReutersBy Kelli Dugan | Reuters – 5 hrs ago


    BIRMINGHAM, Alabama (Reuters) - Alabama lawmakers passed a new bill to revise the state's controversial immigration law on Wednesday, hoping to fend off more legal challenges to the toughest state measure on immigration in the United States.

    The bill, whose final approval now rests with Alabama's governor, largely keeps intact a law approved last year that has sparked lawsuits by the Obama administration and immigrant rights groups who argue it is unconstitutional.

    Businesses in Alabama, especially farmers, have also protested the law, known as HB 56, saying it has led to widespread departures of Hispanic workers from the state and created a labor shortage.

    Lawmakers in the state House of Representatives voted 68-37 to approve the revised bill hours after it passed the Senate. Both chambers are controlled by Republicans.

    Alabama Republicans who support the immigration law say it will help create jobs for legal residents by driving out undocumented workers and their families.

    The changes to the law include a new provision allowing the Department of Homeland Security to publish on a quarterly basis the names of illegal immigrants who appear in court on charges of violating state law whether they have been convicted or not.

    Proponents of the changes said they hoped the revisions would clarify and strengthen some portions of the law that face legal scrutiny.

    But the bill leaves unchanged many key components, including requirements that police check the immigration status of anyone they detain and suspect of being in the country illegally.

    The law also makes it a felony for illegal immigrants to apply for or renew driver's licenses, identification cards or license plates.

    Critics of the bill said the revisions would do little to make substantive changes to the law, which they say has resulted in discrimination and encouraged police racial profiling.

    "We saw this legislative session as an opportunity for our lawmakers to do the right thing and right the wrongs that HB56 created," said Zayne Smith, an immigration policy fellow with the Alabama Appleseed Center, a nonprofit policy and legal advocacy organization. "Unfortunately, that did not happen."

    Several U.S. states have passed laws cracking down on illegal immigrants, charging U.S. President Barack Obama and the U.S. Congress have failed to act on the issue. An estimated 11.2 million illegal immigrants live in the United States and how to deal with them is a contentious political issue.

    Last year, Alabama's immigration law led police to detain two foreign employees in the state's important auto industry for failing to produce proof of legal residency.

    The workers - a German Mercedes Benz executive and a Japanese employee at Honda - were released without charges after the governor's office intervened on their behalf.

    The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, based in Atlanta, has ordered the state to stop enforcing certain provisions of the original law.

    (Additional reporting by Peggy Gargis; editing by Kevin Gray and Mohammad Zargham)

    Lawmakers approve tweaks to Alabama immigration law - Yahoo! News

  7. #7
    working4change
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    Fourth article above added to the Homepage
    http://www.alipac.us/content/alabama...tion-bill-519/

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