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  1. #1
    Senior Member Brian503a's Avatar
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    Bill seeks English only for Metro (Nashville, TN)

    http://www.fairviewobserver.com/apps/pb ... 321/MTCN06

    Tuesday, 09/12/06

    Bill seeks English only for Metro
    Proposal mean-spirited, says spokesman for Hispanic group


    By LEE ANN O'NEAL
    Staff Writer


    English would be Metro government's "official language" and all city communications would have to be in English, and only in English, under a Metro Council bill filed Monday.

    Metro Councilman Eric Crafton, the sponsor of the bill, said the city'scurrent bilingual efforts are a "crutch" and discourage people who don't speak English from learning the language.

    "I just think we're doing people a disservice," Crafton, of west Davidson County, said of some city agencies' providing information in languages other than English. His proposal will be on its first of three required votes next Tuesday.

    It is unclear how a variety of city agencies now offering bilingual services — police, schools and Health Department, among others — would be affected.

    But a critic of the English-only proposal, attorney Gregg Ramos, called the bill "mean-spirited" and said language accommodations help newcomers as they are trying to learn English. Ramos is spokesman for a newly formed group, the Middle Tennessee Hispanic Democrats.

    "That's unfortunate," Ramos said of the bill. "It adds to the divisiveness of our community at a time when further division is not necessary. Metro government reaching out to Spanish-speaking individuals in their native tongue is simply an accommodation that we make as a matter of our humanity."

    Crafton said his effort is not aimed against people who want to immigrate or become citizens.

    "People need to be able to speak English, and it's not helping them to provide a crutch," he said. Crafton, who married a Japanese woman, pointed to his own family in drawing a distinction between a bilingual culture at home and bilingual services from the government.

    "In my house, we speak Japanese and English, because I want my daughter to be able to understand both," Crafton said. "It's great to preserve both cultures when you're in a bicultural family. But when you go to do business at the government-provided institutions, then we have to be able to operate in the language that's the official language there."

    Crafton's bill, if approved by the council on the three required votes, would add this line to Metro's laws: "All communications, publications, and telephone answering systems of metropolitan government boards, commissions, departments and agencies shall be in English only."

    It is unclear whether the law would only encompass city agencies such as the Police and Social Services departments or would also extend to entities such as the Sheriff's Department, a local office required at the state level.

    Metro Law Director Karl Dean said his department became aware of the proposal Monday and had only begun researching its legal requirements.

    Crafton said he doesn't intend for his bill to compromise public safety and said he wouldn't want, for example, police officers to be barred from talking to witnesses or victims of a crime in their native language.

    The city provides a variety of services in languages other than English, in some cases by federal mandate, which would presumably be banned under the English-language bill.

    • The Health Department provides about 100 documents, including information on immunization and treatment for tuberculosis, in languages including English, Spanish, Kurdish and Somali, spokesman Brian Todd said, and the department also has on staff people who speak those languages.

    • The 911 center and the Police Department use translators. The 911 center uses translation service "on a daily basis" and experiences the most need for translation of calls in Spanish and Kurdish, Metro Emergency Communications Center spokeswoman Jeanne Mallory said. The Police Department also uses volunteer interpreters and has officers who speak Spanish, Laotian, German and French, officials there said.

    • The Davidson County public defender's office Web site includes a Spanish translation of its "Defendant and Family Handbook," which provides a broad outline of the criminal process, as well as information about services provided in the Metro Jail and in the community.

    • The Metro school system sends out a newsletter that goes out with report cards and is offered in English and Spanish and is in the process of translating its Student-Parent Handbook and Code of Conduct into Spanish, schools' spokeswoman Olivia Brown said.

    Metro Council reaction to the proposal was mixed.

    Metro Councilman Jim Shulman, of Green Hills, said he would not vote in favor of the bill and said that while "English is the spoken language in America," Nashville's government should, in an effort to "be helpful," provide services in people's native tongues.

    But Metro Councilman Michael Craddock of Madison said not speaking English puts people "at a distinct disadvantage" in conducting business, and he will support the bill. •
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    Senior Member Brian503a's Avatar
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    http://www.freenewmexican.com/news/49093.html

    3:27 pm: Nashville councilman pushes city to use only English


    By ASSOCIATED PRESS
    September 12, 2006

    NASHVILLE, Tennessee (AP) - A Nashville councilman has introduced a proposal that would require the city to conduct all its business English and would prohibit it from offering services in any other language.

    Councilman Eric Crafton said he introduced the bill Monday because current multi-lingual efforts discourage immigrants from learning English.

    "People need to be able to speak English, and it's not helping them to provide a crutch," he said. Crafton, whose wife is Japanese, said it is fine to have a bilingual culture at home but inappropriate for the government to do it.

    The bill is the latest in a series of pending legislation on the local, state and national level aimed at addressing the issue of illegal immigration _ a hot button topic ahead of the November midterm legislative elections.

    On the national level, the U.S. House of Representatives approved an enforcement-only immigration bill criminalizing being in the country illegally and penalize employers who hire such workers. A Senate bill supported by President George W. Bush, meanwhile, would allow illegal immigrants to eventually achieve legal status. Lawmakers are doubtful that a comprehensive immigration reform bill can be passed by the end of the month.

    Crafton's bill says: "All communications, publications, and telephone answering systems of metropolitan government boards, commissions, departments and agencies shall be in English only." It must pass three votes by the council before becoming law.

    Attorney Gregg Ramos, spokesman for the Middle Tennessee Hispanic Democrats group, called the bill "mean-spirited," The Tennessean reported Tuesday.

    The city provides a variety of services in languages other than English, sometimes under federal mandate.

    The city's health department has about 100 documents, including information on immunizations and tuberculosis, in English, Spanish, Kurdish and Somali. Nashville has one of the largest Kurdish populations in the U.S.

    The emergency call center and police department use translators, the public defender's office has a Spanish translation of its defendant's handbook and the school system issues a newsletter in Spanish and is translating the student code of conduct into Spanish.

    "Metro government reaching out to Spanish-speaking individuals in their native tongue is simply an accommodation that we make as a matter of our humanity," Ramos said.

    A similar proposal before the city council in Clarksville, about 40 miles (64 kilometers) northwest of Nashville, was tabled in a vote earlier this month.
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