Ariz. Gov. Vetoes Criminal
Immigrant Bill
Since 04-20-06
PHOENIX, Apr. 18, 2006
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/04/18/ap/politics/mainD8H2G2A81.shtml
(AP) Gov. Janet Napolitano vetoed a bill that would have criminalized the
presence of illegal immigrants in Arizona, citing opposition from police
agencies that want immigration arrests to remain the responsibility of the
federal government.
The proposal would have expanded the state's trespassing law to let local
authorities arrest illegal immigrants anywhere in Arizona, the nation's busiest
illegal entry point. Congress also had considered criminalizing the presence of
illegal immigrants in the country.
In a letter to lawmakers, Napolitano said she opposes automatically turning all
immigrants who sneaked into the state into criminals and that the bill provided
no funding for the new duties.
"It is unfortunate that the Legislature has once again ignored the officials who
are most directly affected by illegal immigration and instead has passed yet
another bill that will have no effect on the problem but that will impose an
unfunded burden on law enforcement," Napolitano wrote Monday.
Supporters said the bill would have given Arizona a chance to get a handle on
its vast border problems by providing a second layer of enforcement to catch the
tens of thousands of immigrants who slip past federal agents each year.
Republican Sen. Barbara Leff of Paradise Valley, who proposed the bill, said the
governor has painted herself as tough on illegal immigration by declaring a
state of emergency at Arizona's border, but has taken little action to back up
her rhetoric.
"I don't think the governor wants to do anything about this problem," Leff said.
She said the bill would have been a means to detain illegal immigrants until
federal agents can pick them up.
The Democratic governor, accused by her Republican critics of being soft on
immigration, has vetoed other immigration bills from the GOP-majority
Legislature within the past year, including a proposal to give police the power
to enforce federal immigration laws.
While immigrants provide the economy with cheap labor, Arizona spends tens of
millions of dollars each year in health care and education costs for illegal
workers and their families.
An estimated 500,000 of the state's population of about 6 million are illegal immigrants.