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  1. #1
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    Long Island lawmakers say loitering law will stem day labore

    Long Island lawmakers say loitering law will stem day laborer woes

    By Frank Eltman
    ASSOCIATED PRESS

    3:30 p.m. March 20, 2007

    GARDEN CITY, N.Y. – Lawmakers in an eastern Long Island county where illegal immigrants have been an issue for nearly a decade considered a bill Tuesday that would ban people seeking day work from congregating on public roads.
    The sponsor, Suffolk County Legislator Jack Eddington, said his aim was improving public safety and preventing accidents, but he conceded he also wants the day laborers – largely suspected of being in the country illegally – to go elsewhere.

    “This is not a black and white or Hispanic issue,” he said of critics accusing him of racism. “These young men are being exploited. They have no safety precautions.”
    Opponents argue the proposal is an attempt to criminalize “standing while Latino.”

    Christina Iturralde, an attorney with the New York-based Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund, which advocates for the civil rights of Hispanics, predicted that the measure would not withstand legal challenges if it were passed.

    “The right of people to seek work in public spaces is a crucial part of our civil society,” she said.

    Suffolk County has been drawing day laborers from Mexico and Central America over the past decade. County Executive Steve Levy estimated that 40,000 of the county's 1.5 million residents are illegal immigrants.

    As they do elsewhere in the country, dozens of men congregate on street corners in certain Suffolk County neighborhoods waiting for contractors to hire them at day rates to perform landscaping, painting, construction and other manual labor.

    “Today's sweatshops are the restaurants for the middle class, the lawns that need to be cut, the cars that need to be washed, the kids that need to be taken care of,” said the Rev. Alan Ramirez, a longtime advocate for day laborers.

    In 2000, two men lured a pair of Mexican day laborers to an abandoned warehouse with a promise of work and then beat them in what prosecutors said was a racially motivated attack. In 2003, teenagers set a fire that destroyed a Mexican family's home; no one was injured.


    http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/nati ... ering.html

  2. #2
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    I just can not believe our government does not see the problem we have with day labors. I would never pick up a stranger on a street corner and bring them to my house!!!

    We evidently do not need more visa's
    Please support ALIPAC's fight to save American Jobs & Lives from illegal immigration by joining our free Activists E-Mail Alerts (CLICK HERE)

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