News Bytes
The Associated
Press reports that Federal authorities have uncovered a scheme to lure
Filipino teachers to the United States with false promises of jobs in Texas
school districts. The authorities charged the Tolentinos, owners of Omni
Consortium, a company that specialized in recruiting Filipino teachers, and
three others, with conspiracy to commit alien smuggling, visa fraud, mail fraud,
and money laundering. Furthermore, two former West Texas public school
administrators, and an elementary school principal, Lokey and the Aguilars, also
face charges that they sponsored work visas for dozens of the teachers in
exchange for free trips to Asia.
*****
The San Diego (CA) Union-Tribune reported that a decade after images of illegal immigrants dashing across the border into San Diego helped fuel California's Proposition 187, immigration anxiety is slashing a new political divide in the Grand Canyon State, where the undocumented population has quadrupled from the 88,000 estimated by federal officials in 1990. A debate is raging over Proposition 200, an initiative that will require proof of identification and citizenship from voters and applicants for some government services that are not federally mandated. Government officials who fail to report violations could face a misdemeanor charge, stated The Arizona Daily Star (Tuscon).
Its
advocates call it the Protect Arizona Now, or the PAN, initiative. The
initiative's authors made sure the ban did not include any federally mandated
services – such as elementary and high school education and emergency medical
care – that a federal court cited in striking down California's Proposition
187.
The Business Journal (Phoenix) adds
that the latest poll by Northern Arizona University shows 42 percent of voters
support Proposition 200, with 29 percent opposed and 29 percent undecided.
Previous state polls showed support for Proposition 200 to be above 60 percent.
That drop in support and the high number of undecided gives hope to critics of
Proposition 200.
Disclaimer: This newsletter is provided as a public service and not intended to establish an attorney client relationship. Any reliance on information contained herein is taken at your own risk.