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  1. #1
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    Herndon, Virginia to Seek New Operator for Day Laborer Site

    http://www.chronwatch.com/content/conte ... catcode=13

    Herndon, Virginia to Seek New Operator for Day Laborer Site
    Written by Tom Fitton
    Saturday, January 20, 2007


    It took a Judicial Watch lawsuit, but it appears the Herndon Town Council may finally get serious about making sure its day laborer site is operated in a manner consistent with state and federal laws. In response to a lawsuit filed by Judicial Watch back in September 2005, the Herndon Town Council voted 6-1 on Tuesday, January 9, in support of a “request for proposal” which seeks a new company to manage the Town’s day laborer site.

    According to the proposal, unlike the current site operator, a nonprofit organization called Project Hope and Harmony, the new company will be required to “ensure that every worker using the agency’s services is legally eligible to work in the United States and shall grant the Town of Herndon permission to periodically monitor for compliance with this.”

    Better late than never.

    Judicial Watch has been pushing a commonsense proposal to screen day laborers for their legal status ever since the new town council took office last summer. How much taxpayer money has the Town of Herndon wasted (and is wasting) to defend the day laborer site in court while this simple solution has been available to them?

    As Judicial Watch has argued from the beginning, Herndon’s taxpayer-funded day laborer site violates both state and federal law. The citizens of Herndon do not want their tax dollars used to subsidize this illegal activity. That’s why they voted out of office proponents of the day laborer site last summer and installed a new town council.

    Council members took a step in the right direction; now let’s see if they follow through. Incidentally, our lawsuit against Herndon (and Fairfax County, Virginia for funding the site) is still active. We will continue to protect the rights of Herndon taxpayers in court until the situation is resolved to their satisfaction.

    Go to our website to read about Judicial Watch’s Herndon lawsuit, and a similar lawsuit filed in Laguna Beach, California, www.judicialwatch.org


    Another JW Victory in the Fight Against Illegal Immigration


    Sticking with Herndon, Virginia and the subject of illegal immigration, it appears the Herndon Police Department will be taking advantage of a federal program which gives local law enforcement officers the opportunity to receive “cross-designation” training in illegal immigration enforcement techniques. Last week, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) approved the Herndon, Police Department to begin the program known as 287(g) training.

    This never would have happened were it not for the work of Judicial Watch. You may recall, in July 2006, Judicial Watch uncovered documents from the Department of Homeland Security related to 287(g) training, proving that local governments have the authority to help enforce immigration law. By releasing these documents to the press, Judicial Watch pressured local officials who have tried to wash their hands of illegal immigration, claiming it is purely a federal problem. Someone in Herndon, however, was paying attention.

    According to ICE, the cross-designation training allows these local and state officers the “necessary resources and latitude to pursue investigations relating to violent crimes, human smuggling, gang/organized crime activity, sexual-related offenses, narcotics smuggling and money laundering; and increased resources and support in more remote geographical locations.”

    The training only takes 5 weeks and costs just $520 per officer. As of June 2006, 136 officers had received 287(g) training and have accounted for 820 immigration-related arrests including fraudulent documents, rape, drug possession, firearm possession, driving under the influence, and burglary. Clearly, the program works.


    We’re pleased Herndon officials responded to Judicial Watch’s efforts and followed through on this critical training program. Without a doubt, the documents released by Judicial Watch in July compelled the Herndon Town Council to make the right decision. Other localities have followed suit, but the new liberal governor of Massachusetts, Deval Patrick, just rescinded the 287(g) agreement between ICE and his state police, which would have had state troopers help with immigration enforcement. (Patrick, by the way, is a notorious liberal going back to his days as a top official in the Clinton Justice Department.)
    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 Dixie's Avatar
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    Town Seeks New Site Operator

    http://www.connectionnewspapers.com/art ... 66&cat=104

    Town Seeks New Site Operator
    New day labor site operator will check work authorization status.
    By Scott J. Krischke
    January 17, 2007


    Photo by Scott J. Krischke/The Connection
    Signs warning of the anti-solicitation ordinance in effect in Herndon in both English and Spanish line Elden Street, where day laborers once congregated en masse as they looked for work.

    In what could mean the beginning of the end for the Herndon Official Workers Center, a controversial endeavor that has been at the center of town politics since it debuted more than a year ago, the Town Council officially announced a request for proposals last week for a new operator who would check work authorization status.

    The measure was passed with a vote of 6-1 at a Jan. 9 public hearing, with town council member Harlon Reece the sole dissenting voice.

    Depending on what is proposed to the town, a new operator may be a private enterprise or a non-profit organization, according to town manager Steve Owen, so long as the operator checks for legal authorization to work in the United States, as per the council's instructions.

    "If it's a non-profit [organization], the town will consider instituting a low-rental agreement as we do now with the current operator," Owen said, saying that a new site may temporarily be housed at the current day labor site's location at 1481 Sterling Road. "We just want to hear what people are willing to do … and the council will make the decision from there."

    The six members of Herndon's town council who voted in favor of the request for a change ran on a ticket opposed to the establishment of the site. Project Hope & Harmony, the non-profit group currently running the site, does not check for work authorization status of laborers, citing that it is the employers' responsibility to verify.

    SIX RESIDENTS, represented by the Washington, D.C.-based conservative advocacy group Judicial Watch filed a lawsuit against the town and the county for the establishment of the site in November, 2005. Fairfax County is under a more than $175,000 contract with Project Hope & Harmony to operate the Herndon site.

    In a news release, Tom Fitton, president of Judicial Watch, praised the Town Council for beginning the search, but has yet to drop the lawsuit against it.

    While a new operator has yet to be found and the labor site is still running as usual, Fairfax County has yet to begin its search for options if the site is removed from town property, according to Brian Worthy, a public information officer for Fairfax County. The site is part of a broad, county-wide plan to manage the crowds of day laborers who had swelled the parking lots and street corners throughout the county.
    The project, he said, is a practical way of dealing with a local problem.

    "You have to make day laborers are part of the solution by organizing and regulating their behavior," Worthy said. "Your immigration status has nothing to do with whether you should be allowed to legally gather on public property."

    THE LOSS OF a site that would cater towards all workers, regardless of their immigration status, would eliminate a practical solution to the problem of a large number of workers lining the streets of Herndon soliciting work, said Reece.

    Anyone who solicits work openly on the streets in Herndon is in violation of a local ordinance passed in conjunction with the creation of the site in 2005, limiting open-air solicitations, making them punishable by up to a $1,000 fine and six months in jail.

    It is that ordinance, paired with the elimination of an open site, that could spell a new kind of legal problem for the town, Reece said.

    Its legality has already been questioned. The constitutionality of the anti-solicitation ordinance was challenged in Fairfax County court on January 11 by attorneys representing Herndon-area resident Stephen Thomas, according to court records.

    Thomas was cited in violation for the ordinance by Herndon Police after he allegedly picked up two workers from Herndon's 7-Eleven parking lot in September of last year to help him with yard work, court documents stated. His lawyers have cited numerous U.S. Supreme Court decisions protecting the freedom of speech in their argument for dismissal.

    THESE CHALLENGES could increase if the current site practices are changed, Reece said.

    "If we have a new operator that limits the use of the site to only authorized workers and we start arresting these people in the streets, a lot of attention will come on the town," he said. "If we follow through with something like this, I believe it will put us at risk for a lawsuit."

    Reece, speaking at the public hearing, mentioned court cases where anti-solicitation ordinances like Herndon's had been ruled unconstitutional as it impedes freedom of speech. Any increase of negative attention to the ordinance associated with a large number of arrests might bring in day labor advocates, he said.

    The organization that took part in some of those cases, the Los Angeles-based National Day Labor Organizing Network, is aware of what is happening in Herndon, according to Chris Newman, the group's director of legal programs.

    "It is our belief and also the belief of several judges that anti-solicitation ordinances conflict with rights guaranteed under the first amendment," Newman said. "It's worrisome to us that this very vocal minority, in trying to further their agenda on immigration, are pushing the Town Council to possibly violate the civil rights of these workers."

    "Obviously immigration is an emotional debate, but the reality is that closing down this site will not result in any change of federal policy."

    THREATS OF LEGAL battles over the actions of the council in relation with the day labor site will not seriously affect the town, according to vice mayor Dennis Husch.

    "What happens out there in California [courts system], that's the ultimate left out there, so in coming here and trying to use that tactic will most likely not end with the same result," Husch said.

    The judicious and thorough nature of Herndon town attorney Richard Kaufman, who drafted the anti-solicitation ordinance, is enough to make council member Dave Kirby confident, he said.

    "Richard Kaufman is a very cautious and updated individual when it comes to the law, and if we started crossing the line with ordinances, I'm sure he would let us know," Kirby said

    The search for the new site operator is another measure being made by the council to get tough on immigration, and threats of legal action are just another obstacle to this "get tough" approach, Kirby added.

    "Part of what we're trying to do with these actions and ordinances is to tell those people who would engage in these illegal activities that they are not welcome in Herndon," he said. "[Threat of legal action] is just a part of the risk of doing what it is we're trying to do in Herndon."
    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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