Posted on 08/25/2007 8:18:07 PM PDT by Clemenza
The end may be near for the immigration laws that turned little Riverside Township into one of the nation's unfriendliest zip codes for illegal immigrants.
In a move yesterday that came as a surprise to residents who have seen the Burlington County town's longtime Brazilian residents leave en masse, officials announced they will move tonight to repeal the ordinances that sought to penalize employers and landlords for hiring and housing illegal immigrants.
The move comes a month after a federal judge in Pennsylvania struck down a similar but harsher law enacted by Hazleton, a coal-mining community near the Poconos.
Riverside passed its law 12 days after Hazleton's made national headlines.
The motivation behind Riverside's about-face was unclear. The announcement was made public with none of the fanfare or outrage that turned the community into the subject of heated national debate and street demonstrations a year ago.
Officials published their intentions in an inch-high public-meeting notice in a local newspaper.
But local residents, who were caught off-guard by the news, said it seemed inevitable.
"When the Hazleton ordinance was kicked, they got the message it would have to be kicked here, too," said Ed Robins, a local small-business owner who has decried the ordinances for harming the local economy.
"How can a small town enforce what the federal government can't back us up on?" said Joe D'Agostino, 46.
"It was doomed to fail," he said.
Robins, who owns Scott Street Music, said that since the law was enacted last summer - and amended several times thereafter - the community has lost thousands of residents.
He said that some 1,500 immigrants left the onetime mill town within the first two weeks of the law hitting the books. The impact has been devastating, he said, considering that Riverside's total population is only 8,000.
"It was very vibrant," Robins said of the commercial corridor that dissects this 1.6-square-mile town.
"Now," he said, "it's dead."
Members of the five-member Township Committee will introduce the repeal ordinance during a special meeting at Riverside Elementary School at 6 p.m. today.
The members of the Township Committee, including Mayor George Conard, deferred comment yesterday to township solicitor George Saponaro, who did not return several messages.
If ultimately approved in the weeks or months to come, this repeal would mark the end of a law that has not been enforced for even a single day. That's because Riverside has been mired in federal and state challenges since enacting the immigrant restrictions on July 26, 2006.
A coalition of local business leaders and immigrants, represented pro bono by attorney James Katz, sued Riverside in state court, saying the ordinance violated New Jersey law.
Members of another group, composed of Latino clergy from across the nation, are plaintiffs in a federal lawsuit against Riverside.
All the while, Riverside has voluntarily abstained from enforcing the law and also has been slapped with a temporary injunction.
A hearing on a permanent injunction request is scheduled in state court for Aug. 31, said Katz. He did not know why Riverside had changed course, but he said the township had no legal authority to enforce its own law.
"Riverside was acting in the face of politics and not in the face of what the law is," he said.
Along the way, the actions of town leaders bitterly divided the township, Katz said.
"It brought out some rather racist and intolerant, anti-immigrant feelings. And it didn't matter if we were talking about immigrants who were lawfully in the country or not," he said.
The Rev. Miguel Rivera, at the helm of the federal challenge against Riverside, was pleased to hear of the planned repeal. But he, too, noted the divisiveness.
"They should have thought first before trying to pass this kind of law," he said.
In an attempt to save Riverside from the illegals, they had to destroy the economy of the town. This is merely collateral damage in the War on Illegals.
"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus
Get The Heck Out Of My Country
“Get the Heck Out Of My Country” :) I’m legal too, born in Queens, NY.
If you type “riverside + missionary eating cannibals” you get 41,300 hits.
That’s alright, I’ll just make up some new credentials.
ping
Lawsuits = legal extortion. You want to force somebody with limited resources to your will, just start filing lawsuits.
“Lawsuits = legal extortion. You want to force somebody with limited resources to your will, just start filing lawsuits.”
Yep.
>Yep. Thats how mine reads on my screen.<
That’s cause you are a Mommy.
LOL!!! Yep. That I am.....
You should post it. I'm tired of those who are here illegally living off the taxpayer dime . . . and getting the areas they infest rewarded with extra congressional seats and government freebies. That, alone, is enough incentive for the government elites to keep bringing them in.
You think so?
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