27 August 2007

Arizona: showing how to deal with illegals

Wow. This is hard to believe, considering the bill was signed by Janet Napolitano, a flaming left-winger. But, alas, the state of Arizona is indeed showing the rest of the country how to deal with illegal immigrants: You gotta get tough with them (via Captain's Quarters):
The immigration hard-liners appear to have proven one of their main arguments. Illegal immigrants who face a loss of employment due to strict employer sanctions will move elsewhere, and rather quickly. One talk-radio host that caters to what the Republic calls "undocumented immigrants" estimates that the departure rate has already hit 100 per day. It will likely increase until most of them depart before the end of the year, when their jobs will disappear.

Arizona passed employer sanctions with a particular bite. Rather than set up an escalating series of fines, which has been the federal approach, the state opted to put employers out of business. A first offense gets a ten-day suspension of the firm's business license, which would close the doors during that period. A subsequent offense revokes the business license permanently. Needless to say, that has provided an incentive to business owners to start checking identities through the federal database and terminating anyone who doesn't clear the system.

The Arizona Chamber of Commerce heads a coalition that wants the law repealed based on a Constitutional challenge, but it's hard to see how they can succeed. The state can impose sanctions on business licenses it issues, and it can insist that employers check for worker eligibility. The real issue for the ACC is labor shortages. The state currently has an unemployment rate of 3.7%, statistically full employment. Arizona employers will have to raise wages to compete for workers, which will cost consumers more but allow for more money in the market as well. It also might prompt business to push for automation where possible, using technology to fill the gaps
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My wife and I used to have to go to a laundromat which was located in the Inskip community of Knoxville, an area which could only be called "Little Mexico". These people were so bold that when they set up a business, all their signs were completely in Spanish, not a lick of English. Perhaps the state of Tennessee could learn a little something, and start cracking down on the flood of illegals into our state.