Plan: Punish illegal immigrants' landlords
July 8, 2008
Plan: Punish illegal immigrants' landlords
By KEVIN PENTON
KEYPORT BUREAU
Mayor Gerard Scharfenberger wants the township to consider adopting an ordinance that would penalize landlords for renting to people who are in the country illegally.
During a Township Committee meeting on Monday, Scharfenberger said he would like Middletown's ordinance to be modeled on a proposal Bound Brook officials will consider during a meeting today.
"I've been getting a lot of calls about this," said Scharfenberger, who stated that he is concerned about the hazards of overcrowded living conditions. "If we know (there's overcrowding) and we don't do something and there's a death, we would never be able to live with ourselves."
The Middlesex County borough's proposal would prohibit Bound Brook from contracting with any firm that has employees who are in the country illegally, require landlords to verify the legal status of their tenants and instruct police to notify federal immigration authorities should a person who is arrested be found to be undocumented.
State code already regulates the number of occupants per square foot a dwelling can legally house, said Township Administrator Anthony Mercantante, who noted that Middletown recently needed to deal with an overcrowded residential unit. The occupants were legal residents, he said.
"Legal or not, we don't want overcrowded houses," Mercantante said. "It's something we enforce pretty regularly."
Scharfenberger said he believes the ordinance could supplement the existing regulations.
"This would further preempt landlords from creating these illegal situations," said Scharfenberger before the meeting. The mayor would expect Middletown's ordinance to be enforced by complaints from residents to township officials.
"Most people kind of know what is going on in their neighborhoods," Scharfenberger said before the meeting.
In September, the Burlington County community of Riverside rescinded its local immigration enforcement law after a federal judge struck down a similar law in Hazleton, Pa., said resident John Schwebel, who cautioned the township against embarking down a potentially expensive legal road.
"When you try to tie laws to citizenship status, you run into trouble," said Schwebel, who believes existing regulations could deal with Scharfenberger's concerns.
Middletown would extensively review any proposal before it would be presented for a vote, said Bernard Reilly, the township's attorney.
In 2006, Middletown's total population was 69,870, according to U.S. Census data. Of that, whites made up 63,297, or 90.6 percent of the township's population; Hispanics were 3,584, or 5.1 percent; Asians were 2,600, or 3.7 percent; and blacks were 1,119, or 1.6 percent, according to the data. Hispanics can be of any race.
Asian, black, Hispanic and white households in Middletown each had an average size of three people in 2000, according to U.S. Census data.
Middletown's 2006 population increased by 5.3 percent from 2000, when it was 66,327, according to the U.S. Census. During the same period, Hispanics increased by 58.2 percent, Asians increased by 51.4 percent, blacks increased by 39.4 percent and whites increased by 0.8 percent, according to the data.
Before the meeting, Frank Argote-Freyre, director of the Monmouth County chapter of the Latino Leadership Alliance of New Jersey, said that given the relatively small size of Middletown's minority population, he questions Scharfenberger's motivation for bringing up the issue.
"This will further discourage landlords from renting to anyone who looks brown," Argote-Freyre said. "The mayor's proposal turns landlords into immigration agents."
Angel Matos, the Alliance's secretary, offered the organization's services to Middletown during Monday's meeting. Matos believes the Alliance could assist Middletown in finding a solution to issues like muster zones and overcrowded housing that would avoid costly litigation and best serve all affected sides.
"We'd be more than happy to provide some value to the discussion that will ensue," Matos said.
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