Contradictions breed anger and confusion as
U.S., state and local governments enact varying laws. The free market
sets own rules.
By Anna Gorman and Jennifer Delson, Times Staff
Writers
Illegal immigrants receive in-state tuition for
California colleges but don't qualify for federal loans.
They can buy cars and car insurance but, in most states, can't get
driver's licenses.
And they regularly find jobs at publicly funded
hiring halls but can't lawfully work.
Immigration policies in the United States are contradictory and often
confusing, alternately welcoming illegal immigrants to the country and
telling them to go away.
"Do you want me to go back to my country? Or stay? Or what?" said
Cristina Cardelas, 24, who is working, paying taxes and attending school
in a country where her presence is illegal.
"Public policy is not logical sometimes," said Harry Pachon, executive
director of USC's Tomαs Rivera Policy Institute, a Latino think tank.
"It's almost like Prohibition. The law says one thing, but the reality
is something else."
In recent months, the debate over illegal immigration has grown
increasingly fierce in Washington and around the country as advocates
and opponents have wrangled over day labor centers, driver's licenses,
citizen border patrols and, most recently, voter identification.
"We are deeply divided among ourselves," said Frank Bean, co-director of
UC Irvine's Center for Research on Immigration, Population and Public
Policy.
Though nowhere close to agreeing on solutions, the two sides often can
agree on at least one thing: U.S. policies frequently are at
cross-purposes.
The main reason for the domestic tug-of-war is well known: the tension
between the demand for cheap labor versus the public cost of providing
health, educational and other services to migrants and their families.
Largely because illegal immigration is clandestine, no one has
definitively measured its costs and benefits. Still, with 8 million to
10 million undocumented immigrants in the country, the issue provokes
strong and often conflicting opinions.
"Immigrants are the backbone of our economy, and employers continue to
need their labor," said Tanya Broder, staff attorney for the
pro-immigrant National Immigration Law Forum, "but our immigration laws
haven't kept up with this."
"You are not just getting the cheap laborer," countered Rick Oltman,
Western field director for the Federation for American Immigration
Reform, "you are getting that guy's wife and child, who is in school
.
You create these little illegal immigrant communities that are basically
sanctuaries."
The high emotions and contradictory impulses have made for strange
politics. The Bush administration, whipsawed by opposing forces within
the Republican Party, has tried to walk a fine line between supporting a
guest worker program and cracking down on illegal immigrants. Of late,
it has given more emphasis to border security, angering businesses
within its own party.
"What we have now is a dishonest immigration policy," said Mark
Krikorian, who runs the conservative Center for Immigration Studies in
Washington, D.C. "We make it tough to get across the border but easy to
get a job. This is really the central conflict. Everything stems from
that."
Inconsistencies in public policy open the door for illegal immigrants to
enter the embrace of the private marketplace.
Illegal immigrants cannot get Social Security cards but can get
U.S.-issued tax identification numbers, which they can increasingly use
to get home loans. Undocumented immigrants also can get Mexican
governmentissued identifications, called matricula consular
cards, which they can use to open bank accounts, obtain credit and
purchase insurance in the U.S.
Some companies are more than willing to accommodate them.
"We have the business economy identifying the undocumented in a way that
the government refuses to do," said Rob Paral, a research fellow at the
pro-immigrant American Immigration Law Foundation.
The companies, for their part, are unapologetic.
"Whether they are supposed to be here or not, the
reality is that they are here," said Robert Alaniz, a spokesman for
WellPoint, parent company of Blue Cross of California, which accepts the
matricula consular as identification in insurance purchases.
"They are a viable part of our economy."
One of the sorest points in the debate is illegal immigrants' use of
government services, especially healthcare. The businesses that hire
illegal immigrants tend not to offer health insurance, and the
immigrants don't qualify for most government programs, so many go to
emergency rooms for treatment when the need arises. Hospitals, by
federal law, are required to provide emergency care, regardless of
patients' immigration status.
In Los Angeles County, officials estimated in 2003
that the annual bill at public hospitals for uninsured illegal
immigrants reached $340 million.
The sum of these contradictions is a lot of anger and confusion.
"I am allowed to work
and pay my taxes and everything, but I am not
allowed to be here," said Cardelas, an undocumented immigrant who has
both a matricula and federal tax ID number. "It's hypocritical."
Cardelas, whose mother is a cook and whose father is a baker, got
scholarships and worked two jobs as a secretary and a waitress to
attend community college. Now she attends UCLA, where she is studying
public policy and international relations. She pays in-state tuition.
But when she graduates, Cardelas said, she will be stuck back working
low-wage jobs that don't demand a valid Social Security card.
"You're allowing me to go to school and get an education," Cardelas
said, "but why?"
Adding to the contradictions is uneven enforcement of immigration laws.
The tough stance mostly ends at the border, critics say.
"Once you get in, the odds of getting picked up are pretty low," said
researcher Michael Fix of the Urban Institute, a Washington think tank.
In addition, employers, for the most part, face little risk of sanction
for hiring undocumented workers. Meanwhile, to assist such workers in
their job search, a thriving not-so-underground economy in fraudulent
documents has developed. Phony green cards and Social Security cards are
hawked daily in public places.
Many illegal immigrants point out that the government could find them if
it really wanted to; many have left a clear paper trail. But ironically,
undocumented immigrants unless they have committed crimes besides
illegal entry often face deportation only if they call attention to
themselves by applying for legal residency and being denied.
That's what happened with Celestino Morales, 39, who came to the United
States from Mexico in 1989 and has worked and paid taxes here ever
since. In 2002, Morales sought legal residency. The immigration
authorities determined that he did not qualify. Now Morales may be
forced to leave his wife and daughters and return to Mexico.
"It seems unjust what they are doing," said Morales, who owns a home in
East Los Angeles. "I don't bother anyone."
Some illegal immigrants say they are torn between doing the right thing
and maintaining the basic deceptions that make their lives here
possible.
Orange County resident Ana Maria Camacho, 35, got her job as a dental
intake assistant by using a phony Social Security card, so she can't
tell her boss her real name.
But figuring it might help her prospects for gaining legal status, she
pays taxes using her real name and a legitimate taxpayer
identification number.
The problem is, Camacho can't report her real earnings or their source
because she works under another name. So she makes up that part, calling
herself a caretaker for senior citizens.
"It gets to the point that we don't even know who we told which lie to,"
said Jorge Camacho, 37, Ana's husband.
"Or who to tell the truth to," Ana Maria added.
Much of the nation's wavering on illegal immigration stems from a lack
of national direction, say academics and other experts. State and local
governments end up making their own often varying policies, while
the free market sets its own rules.
For example, some cities have opened day labor centers to manage workers
who gather on streets and sidewalks, whereas others have banned them
from congregating.
Some states, such as Oregon, allow illegal immigrants to get driver's
licenses. Others, such as California, don't.
But an unlicensed driver can buy car insurance.
Norberto Rivera, 33, an Orange County machinist, said he can't get to
his job without a car so he bought one, used. Though undocumented and
unable to get a license, he registered it in his name with the state
Department of Motor Vehicles and signed up for insurance on the car lot
with a storefront broker for Lincoln General Insurance Co.
"Sometimes it seems the rules don't make a lot of sense, and sometimes
we immigrants cannot follow them all," Rivera said. "But we can try to
follow some."
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-mecontradict27nov27,0,3662113.story?track=tottext