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Contributor
Ray
Haynes
Mr.
Haynes is an Assembly member representing Riverside and
Temecula.
He serves on the Appropriations and Budget Committees. [go to
Assembly Member Haynes
website at California Assembly][go to Haynes index]
The
California Border Police
A Very Simple Idea…
[Ray
Haynes] 5/10/05
Talk to anyone
and they will tell you that our national borders are out of
control. We are either unwilling or unable to enforce immigration laws. The
result is billions of dollars in free government services paid to those who
break our laws, a flagrant abuse of those laws, and a system that exploits
those who try to enter this country illegally.
My first observation about the problem is that I understand
the motivation of those who want to come to this country. If
I lived in abject poverty in a third world country, I would do
whatever it takes, go wherever I had to, and suffer whatever
indignity I had to in order to make life better for my family.
The biggest sin of the way this country deals with illegal immigration
today is that it is a system of exploitation. Many times good
people, looking for a better life, are transported across the
border by illegal traffickers, under inhumane conditions, in
order to be exploited by people on our side of the border. Most
illegals suffer enormous indignities, to live a life of constant
fear, and work in a substandard environment, and the government
turns a blind eye to the exploiters on both sides of the border.
In fact, the government, in some cases, actually profits from
the payment of taxes into the social security system without
any obligation to cover the illegal worker paying the tax. And
there are plenty of bureaucrats who benefit by the increased
personnel and budgets that come from servicing the illegal alien
population. In a system that can only be described as institutionalized
racism, everyone but the illegal makes a lot of money by ignoring
the law. Unfortunately, the federal government chooses not to
do the simplest tasks to end this exploitation.
The good news is that the federal government allows state and
local government to enforce federal immigration laws, if they
choose. Unfortunately, some local governments grant illegals
sanctuary in their cities, and other local governments try to
add immigration enforcement on to the myriad of enforcement activities
they already expect of the line officers. Nowhere in this country
is there a state or local agency whose sole function is to enforce
federal immigration laws.
California pays a disproportionate share of the cost of illegal
immigration. We pay for the health care and education of illegal
aliens. We give them welfare and food stamps and get no reimbursement
from the federal government. We give them reduced college tuition,
and illegal aliens occupy a little over one-fourth of our available
prison beds. The cost to the California taxpayer to pay for all
these programs is anywhere from $9 to $10 billion. 500,000 new
illegals enter our state every year.
So why not enforce
federal law? Why not set up a state agency that could enforce
these laws throughout the state with trained
police personnel in a comprehensive and uniform manner throughout
the state? At the border. In the jails. At the street corners
where everyone sees them standing every day soliciting under-the-table
labor for the day. It is too easy. Why didn’t anyone think
of it before?
Will it cost too much? It will cost about $200-300 million
dollars, but it could save us $5 billion. That is worth the cost.
Will it protect us? The public safety danger of not controlling
our borders is obvious. The cost of doing nothing is too high.
To do this, I have introduced ACA 20, which would establish the
California Border Police agency. There is a simultaneous effort
to place this idea on the ballot via the initiative process,
which you can learn about at www.calborderpolice.com.
It is a simple idea, and those are usually the ideas that work
the best in government. Can government mess it up? Yes, but it
is so simple that it will be real hard for politicians to mess
it up. It is an idea, however, whose time has come. We can no
longer afford to do nothing. We can no longer afford to complain
about the federal government failing to act. We can take the
steps necessary to solve our own problems, and create a California
Border Police. It is just too simple to not do it. CRO
Mr.
Haynes is a California Assembleyman representing Riverside
and Temecula and frequent contributor to CaliforniaRepublic.org.
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