Town to Vote on Blocking
Undocumented Immigrants
Renters, workers would face
background checks
FREMONT, Neb.
(By Timberly Ross, AP)
June 21, 2010 Angered by a
recent influx of Hispanic workers attracted by jobs at local meatpacking
plants, voters in the eastern Nebraska city of Fremont will decide today
whether to ban hiring or renting property to undocumented immigrants.
The vote will be the culmination of a two-year fight that saw proponents
collect enough signatures to put the question to a public vote. If the
ordinance is approved, the community of 25,000 people could face a long
and costly court battle. Either way, the emotions stirred up won't
settle quickly.
"Even if we say 'no' ... we still need to say, 'How do we get along with
each other now?'" said Kristin Ostrom, who helps oversee a campaign
against the measure.
Across the nation, people have been outraged by and demanded action
against the poor enforcement of federal laws to prevent undocumented
immigration. A law recently introduced in Arizona requires police to
question people on their immigration status if there's a "reasonable
suspicion" they are undocumented.
A man who helped write the Arizona law is helping to fight for the
ordinance in Fremont, which has seen its Hispanic population surge in
the past two decades. That increase is largely because they were
recruited to work for the Fremont Beef and Hormel plants, and the city
maintains an enviably low unemployment rate.
Nonetheless, residents worry that jobs are going to undocumented
immigrants who they fear could drain community resources.
Clint Walraven, who has lived in Fremont all his 51 years, said the jobs
should go to legal residents who are unemployed something he believes
the ordinance would help fix. Discussions on the issue can get heated,
he said, particularly if racism is mentioned.
"It has nothing to do with being racist," he said. "We all have to play
by the same rules. ... If you want to stay here, get legal."
When he worked at the Hormel plant in the 1980s, Walraven said, he had
one Hispanic co-worker.
From about 165 Hispanics both legal and undocumented living in
Fremont in 1990, the total surged to 1,085 in 2000, according to census
expert David Drozd at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. He said an
estimated 2,060 Hispanics lived there last year. In May, Fremont
recorded just 4.9 percent unemployment, in line with the statewide rate
and significantly lower than the national average of 9.7 percent.
How renting, hiring checks would work if approved, the measure will
require potential renters to apply for a license to rent. The
application process will force Fremont officials to check if the renters
are in the country legally. If they are found to be undocumented, they
will not be issued a license allowing them to rent.
The ordinance also requires businesses to use the federal E-Verify
database to ensure employees are allowed to work.
Supporters of the proposal say it's needed to make up for what they see
as lax federal law enforcement. Opponents say it could fuel
discrimination.
Results are expected tonight.
Ron Tillery, executive director of the Fremont Chamber of Commerce,
which opposes the measure, said businesses are concerned the E-Verify
system isn't reliable and they would be subject to fines if forced to
rely on it. He pointed out the main targets of the ordinance the
Fremont Beef and Hormel plants would not be covered by it anyway
because they are located outside the city.
Walraven said the measure is necessary because workers send their
salaries to family in Mexico instead of spending it in the city.
"I understand supporting your family," he said, "But it's very much at
our expense. We're footing the bill."
Those costs include spending on education and medical care, said Jerry
Hart, a Fremont resident who petitioned for the vote. He said the
ordinance would help curb that spending and protect jobs.
He said it would also end the divisiveness that's taken over.
"The division is because the undocumented aliens are here and nobody's
taken care of it," he said. "If it does not pass, it's going to get
worse."
The Fremont Tribune has reported several instances of legal Hispanic
residents being told to return to Mexico, including a woman who was
shoved and yelled at by an elderly white man in a grocery store.
Hart said he's been called a Nazi.
"Fear is kind of guiding," said Ostrom, adding frustration about
immigration issues nationwide ignites a misconception all Hispanic
immigrants in Fremont are undocumented.
Sandra Leffler, 69, who owns a downtown antique store with her husband,
Marv, said she knows not all Hispanics are undocumented immigrants, but
it's hard not to think that way. She said she scrutinizes her Hispanic
customers.
"I have to admit, when I see them come into the store ... I can't help
wondering if I'm profiling someone who's completely honest," she said.
The Fremont City Council narrowly rejected a policy similar to the
proposed ordinance in 2008, but proponents got it to a public vote and
the state Supreme Court refused to block it.
The Nebraska chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union has
threatened a lawsuit, and the city worries about the cost of defending
the policy. The city has estimated the legal action would cost $1
million per year to fight costs that would have to be covered by
property tax raises and city job cuts.
Kansas City, Mo.-based attorney Kris Kobach, who worked on the Arizona
law and has been in legal battles over local ordinances elsewhere, said
Valley Park, Mo. paid between $250,000 and $300,000 in legal fees in a
similar case. Valley Park, like Fremont, is covered by the 8th Circuit.
State Sen. Charlie Janssen of Fremont, who has said he may introduce an
Arizona-style bill in the Legislature next session, said it's
unfortunate residents have to decide how to vote amid threats of a
lawsuit.
He has declined to give his position
on the ordinance, saying residents need to decide on their own. "A vote
for or against the ordinance does not make you more or less patriotic,
just as a vote for or against the ordinance does not make you racist or
not," he wrote on his legislative blog.