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Ft Wayne, IN editorial: Immigration bill (Arizona-style) punishes students, state

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pampango Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Feb-13-11 07:00 AM
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Ft Wayne, IN editorial: Immigration bill (Arizona-style) punishes students, state
http://www.journalgazette.net/article/20110213/EDIT07/302139970/1021/EDIT

Whatever is driving the anti-immigration sentiment in the Indiana General Assembly – whether it’s a sincere concern for the state’s economic well-being or a belief that undocumented residents should be punished – it threatens to set the state back by decades.

SB 590, authored by Carmel Republican Michael Delph and modeled after Arizona’s controversial immigration law, includes provisions aimed at restricting education opportunities for immigrants. Without proper documentation, students wouldn’t be eligible for in-state tuition or state aid.

Congress could have addressed the problem, but failed even in a lame duck session to pass the DREAM Act, which would have provided a path for immigrant children to obtain legal status. Illegal immigrants are not eligible for federal financial aid.

States, however, are allowed to set their own education policy. Ten states have laws expressly granting in-state tuition rates to illegal immigrants. If the bill is approved, Indiana would join Arizona, Colorado and Georgia in prohibiting the same, although Democratic lawmakers in Colorado are attempting to undo the ban.
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B Calm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Feb-13-11 07:10 AM
Response to Original message
1. The Journal Gazette has had some really good articles lately. Check
out this one! Policing the rush to charter schools


Published: January 16, 2011 3:00 a.m.
Policing the rush to charter schools
Knowledge and learning, generally diffused throughout a community, being essential to the preservation of a free government; it shall be the duty of the General Assembly to encourage, by all suitable means, moral, intellectual, scientific, and agricultural improvement; and provide, by law, for a general and uniform system of Common Schools, wherein tuition shall be without charge, and equally open to all.

– Indiana Constitution

For perspective on Gov. Mitch Daniels’ education policy, consider the ramifications if a similar policy applied to Indiana’s city police departments.

After all, the police departments clearly are failing. Each week, dozens of crimes occur in our city, and many of them go unsolved. As Hoosiers, we cannot allow this record of failure to continue. Remember when we were kids? We could walk to the park without our parents. We could leave our doors unlocked. Clearly, the police departments have gotten worse and worse.

What we need is to give police departments competition and to give citizens choices.

Indiana should empower a university with a criminal justice program – say, Indiana Tech – to authorize charter police departments. Citizens could choose to have the charter department, not city police, patrol by their homes and answer their calls for help.

But that’s not enough. Rich people can hire security guards. Why shouldn’t all Hoosiers have the same access to safety? Let’s give every Hoosier who wants one a voucher financed with our tax dollars to purchase their own security if they choose.

Of course, there will be no tax increase to finance these additional police forces, so money will have to come out of the city police department budget. Because the vast majority of that budget goes to salaries and wages, that will mean eliminating positions on the city police department. Liberals may argue that fewer police officers will make city police even worse. But all the city police need to do is look for efficiencies.

One way to hold the line on the city police budget is by stopping the huge pay increases officers receive every year – 1 percent in 2011 alone. Police officers should be paid based on their success – the crime rates in the neighborhoods they patrol, for example. Higher pay where crime rates are low, lower pay where they are worse.

If that were the state’s approach to police departments, Hoosiers would quickly see some of the faults.

For one, the historic increases in crime have much more to do with society than police departments. And in recent years, crime has not been increasing substantially. And most Hoosiers go through the day without being crime victims.

Hoosiers would surely see the unfairness of paying police officers who patrol the most dangerous, crime-ridden neighborhoods less than the officers who have the safest streets.

Daniels has long called for greater government efficiency, going as far as to advocate for school corporations to consolidate.

Where is the logic in spreading limited state money to more and more schools, each with its own principal, its own bureaucracy?

There is a fundamental unfairness in this comparison, however. Nearly all of our elected leaders consider running police departments a clear function of government. Practically anyone, it seems, can start a school.

Yet, Indiana’s constitution makes no requirement that cities have police departments – or fire departments or street departments or zoning departments. The state’s constitution makes clear, though, that it is a fundamental obligation of Indiana to provide an education through a system of public schools.

Why would elected Indiana leaders want the state to transfer resources from the public schools, for which they have a constitutional obligation, to private schools for which Indiana has no obligation?

Perhaps our state leaders should focus on better meeting their constitutional mandate to provide education through a system of common schools rather than to encourage parents not to send their children to those very schools.

http://www.journalgazette.net/article/20110116/EDIT0502...

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Shandris Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Feb-13-11 07:13 AM
Response to Original message
2. What's ironic is that the bill is more than likely prompted by...
...this Carmel imbecile stopping by the McDonald's on 96th and US31 some morning and discovering that they have a large number of Hispanic/Latino workers. Probably couldn't understand them (isn't that always the excuse?). Not that they're hard to understand -- they're not. And that McDonald's served the best McDonald's food in a 10-mile radius.

There's CERTAINLY nowhere near CARMEL that he's seeing immigrants. Carmel is practically the rich person's punchline around here -- the legends of the 'Carmel wives' and their SUV's abides for a reason. You can see them rushing down 465 around Indy, chatting away like magpies on the cellphone all times of the day, populating the fast lane and paying NO attention to who they might hit. It's that whole entitlement mentality that having more money than God brings.

Oh...and 'Carmel Republican' is redundant. Seriously. :)

This whole thing is nothing more than more cater-to-the-tea-party-types crap that will haunt Hoosiers for years if it passes. We do NOT have a large illegal immigrant population, or if we do, it sure as hell isn't anywhere I've ever been. Or heard of.
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