| Same
Ol' Tune for Town Council |
| People have asked me recently what I think the issues are
for this May's Town Council election, and I have told them
that immigration-related issues, which consumed the last election,
seem to be subsiding this year. |
| The Herndon Official Workers Center, which was a politically
polarizing focal point, has come and gone. There is no official
day labor site in the town anymore. The ordinances that supported
the center have been deemed unconstitutional. And there is
no effort, neither is there likely to be for the foreseeable
future, to try to piece the strategy back together again.
Those days are gone. |
| The town has gotten a hand on its overcrowding problem,
thanks in large part to increased staffing and funding provided
by the current council and the previous one, and recent statistics
show that complaints have fallen. The overcrowding situation
seems to be improving. |
| The Herndon Police have been operating under the federal
287(g) program, which authorizes local officers to perform
some federal immigration functions, for about eight months
now and the world has not ended. Yes, the town is still paying
its officers to do the federal government's job without any
compensation from the federal government. However, a report
at the end of 2007 found that 29 people had been jailed using
the 287(g) powers. |
| But this week the Town Council continued to be distracted
by immigration issues by endorsing the mission statement and
goals of a small group of local governments called the Coalition
on Illegal Aliens. This is a group of government officials
that have joined at the initiation of the Culpeper County
Board of Supervisors, and with much support from the Town
of Herndon, to "minimize the impact of illegal aliens" on
their communities. Herndon Mayor Steve DeBenedittis is chairman
of the group, and Vice Mayor Dennis Husch has been instrumental
in his support of the group. |
| It is odd that the Town Council would endorse such a coalition,
when, as is pointed out by Herndon citizen Dianna Traub this
week in her letter to the editor, there are other, well-established
and more credible agencies that have been representing local
governments on immigration-related issues for years. |
| The mission statement for the group is: "Promote and influence
a unified strategy at the local, state, and federal level
to minimize the impact of illegal aliens on local communities
while understanding the positive contributions of immigrants." |
| Among the groups stated objectives are: "Identify the challenges
created by the presence of illegal aliens." I think the town
has already clearly had ample opportunity to fulfill this
objective, as it relates to the Town of Herndon. After years
of debate and action, the citizenry of Herndon and the leadership
of Herndon understand the challenges we face. |
| Another objective is "Educate local governments of the challenges
created by the presence of illegal aliens." I suspect that
other than a few communities in Alaska, there are few communities
in America that don't already appreciate the challenges created
by illegal immigrants. We are all living with the same problem
that the federal government has failed to address. |
| Rather than continue to push a single agenda item, perhaps
it's time for the Town Council to stop focusing on immigration
as the source of all the town's problems and move on to other
important town business. |
| The town would be better served to rely upon the Virginia
Municipal League and the Virginia Association of Counties
to carry the torch of immigration reform to the General Assembly
and the U.S. Congress. |
| Indeed, the Town Council would have done well to embrace
the perspective of the City of Falls Church, the City of Alexandria
or Arlington County, in the Virginia Municipal League's recent
survey of local governments' approach to issues of illegal
immigration. |
| In response to that survey, the City of Alexandria referred
to a resolution passed by the City Council which identifies
immigration as a federal responsibility similar to patent
law and commerce regulation, and specifies that the city will
"foster an atmosphere of inclusiveness that respects the dignity
and worth of every person without regard to race, color, sex,
religion, ancestry, national origin, marital status, age,
disability, sexual orientation, and familial status." |
| Ah, but it's too late for that in Herndon, isn't it? |