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  1. #1
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    Costly Illegals - Loose border saps county coffers

    http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/200 ... alth_x.htm

    Loose border saps county coffers

    By Donna Leinwand, USA TODAY
    The United States' inability to slow illegal immigration from Mexico is fueling a financial crisis in the 24 counties along the 1,951-mile Southwest border, according to a new study. It says the counties are struggling to fund law enforcement, health programs and other necessities because they are spending millions of dollars a year to care for illegal immigrants.

    A border agent searches suspected illegal immigrants who were stopped Monday in southwestern Cochise County, Ariz.
    By Mark Levy for USA TODAY

    Illegal immigrants continue to flow across the border even as increased security since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks — there now are about 10,000 federal agents there, up from 7,000 — has boosted arrests dramatically. In 2004, there were 1.14 million arrests along the border that stretches from California to Texas, the Department of Homeland Security says. That was up 26% from the year before.

    The jump in arrests has come to symbolize how localities have been left with much of the bill for border security, according to a study by the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) to be released today by the U.S./Mexico Border Counties Coalition. A funding increase by Congress last year will boost the number of federal detention cells from 18,000 to 20,000. However, that's not nearly enough to handle the waves of immigrants who are being arrested, so such people often end up in local jails.

    Reimbursements fall short

    The federal government reimburses localities and states for services they provide to illegal immigrants, but the payments don't come close to matching the localities' costs, the report says. For example, Department of Justice records show Arizona's four border counties asked the federal government for $23.2 million last year to cover the cost of jailing thousands of illegal immigrants. The counties were reimbursed $731,000.

    In California, San Diego County spends $50 million a year to arrest, jail, prosecute and defend illegal immigrants, and is reimbursed about $2 million, says county Supervisor Greg Cox, president of the border counties coalition. The $48 million shortfall cuts into the $600 million a year the county has for discretionary spending, he says. "That's money that would support libraries, parks and public safety."

    Dennis Soden, executive director of the Institute for Policy and Economic Development at UTEP, says the border situation "creates a burden on the court system, the jail system and the prison system.

    "The fact that the border can't be controlled creates a law enforcement problem that falls on the local jurisdictions," he says. "There's no other place in the country in this situation."

    Homeland Security spokesman Russ Knocke says that besides increasing security, the federal government is launching a strategy to reduce the burden on state and local governments by returning illegal immigrants to their native countries more quickly.

    Knocke says the department hopes to continue increasing the number of federal detention cells in border states. He says Homeland Security also is counting on Congress to create a guest-worker program that would allow the estimated 8 million to 10 million illegal immigrants in the USA to stay here for a limited time — likely six years. "It's no longer a situation where border security means just Border Patrol agents," he says.

    This week, the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee is considering immigration proposals that include registering, fingerprinting and issuing guest-worker permits to illegal immigrants in this country. The full Senate is likely to debate the issue March 27. Meanwhile, the House of Representatives has endorsed building a controversial double fence between the USA and Mexico, and tougher penalties for immigration violations.



    By USA TODAY, Sources: Census Bureau (2000 statistics); Institute for Policy and Economic Development, University of Texas at El Paso
    Medical facilities in border counties have to deal with some of the nation’s highest rates of uninsured patients.


    Further effects

    The impact of illegal immigrants on border counties reaches well beyond law enforcement, Soden says:

    • U.S. law requires hospitals to treat anyone who needs emergency care, regardless of their ability to pay or immigration status. The UTEP study found that border counties have some of the nation's highest rates for uninsured patients, and that treating illegal immigrants accounts for nearly one-quarter of the uncompensated costs at the counties' hospitals. In Pima County, Ariz., hospitals reported having to absorb $76 million in treatment costs in 2000, about one-third of it from treating illegal immigrants.

    • Cochise County, Ariz., reported spending tens of thousands of dollars each year to collect trash left at remote campsites by illegal immigrants. County Board of Supervisors Chairman Pat Call estimates that 13% of the solid waste generated in Cochise comes from such sites.

    "The garbage issue is huge. Diapers, toilet paper, plastic jugs, backpacks," says Call, whose sparsely populated county in southeastern Arizona has become a favorite pathway into the USA for drug smugglers, human traffickers and Mexicans seeking work. "You name it, we've got to pay the bill for cleaning it up."

    Like Cox and other officials in border jurisdictions, Call says the increasing cost of illegal immigration on local law enforcement is rippling through his county's budget.

    Prosecuting and jailing illegal immigrants who commit crimes costs Cochise County about $5 million of its $49 million annual budget, Call says. In 2005, the county asked the federal government for $2.5 million to help offset the costs and received $73,000, Call says.

    About 25% of Cochise's budget paid for health care to uninsured people — most of them illegal immigrants — who went to the county hospital's emergency room, he says.

    "The border region has some unique hardships," Call says, citing the UTEP report's analysis of the border counties' relatively high rates of uninsured residents and shortages of doctors and nurses. "The immigration issue, because the feds have not moved fast enough or thoroughly enough to deal with it, just exacerbates the panoply of issues we have here."

    Dixie
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  2. #2
    Senior Member JuniusJnr's Avatar
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    How very interesting! My border county has published statistics with approximately the SAME percentage of unpaid hospital bills as there are people without insurance.

    We have hospital bonds tacked onto our home owners insurance to keep one of these hospitals they like so well open. It is the one where they take all the gunshot wounds, the canal drownings, etc, which are almost always related to illegal aliens in one way or another.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #3
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    What Peeves me the Most!

    I know what you are saying, John Peter Smith (JPS) is in my back yard.
    Babies born to women living in the country illegally made up nearly three-fourths of the births at Fort Worth's public John Peter Smith Hospital this year, the Star-Telegram reported. Of the 5,775 deliveries during fiscal year 2005, which ended in September, 4,207 were the children of women without immigration documents.source: http://tcrr.benezet.org/phpnuke/modules ... =0&thold=0

    You know what peeves me the most. Illegals have better healthcare benefits and prescription drug coverage than our seniors. Better than most of us. Democrats what do you say about that??? Bush, you got elected making promises about this.

    http://www.senate.gov/~hutchison/prl578.htm

    Texas hospitals statewide are burdened by more than $150 million in uncompensated emergency care for illegal immigrants forcing hospitals to cut back services and affect the care available to Texas communities.

    The Medicare Prescription Drug and Modernization Act signed into law on December 8, 2003 included the reimbursement program that is set to provide $250 million annually to help hospitals provide costly care to illegal immigrants.

    Illegals are Pork
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  4. #4

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    Sure...thanks to our government...we are PATSIES...but as they said on Lou Dobbs last night our government does what we LET them do.

    I'm not so sure about that...

    MJ

  5. #5
    Senior Member JuniusJnr's Avatar
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    Let's just say I'm not so sure how long the gov't is going to get away with it now that people are becoming convinced there actually IS a problem.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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