A General Assembly committee that Latino advocates feared could set a path for North Carolina to follow other Sun Belt states into a crackdown on illegal immigrants wrapped up a year of meetings this week by recommending no new legislative action other than urging Washington to do more. WRAL reports representatives of North Carolina’s home building, construction, farming and other industries that extensively use immigrant labor had urged lawmakers to be cautious.
A lot has changed since the House Select Committee on the State’s Role in Immigration Policy was conceived amid action by other GOP-controlled legislatures in Arizona, South Carolina, Alabama and Georgia to pass tough new laws targeting illegal immigrants. “We’re not recommending a specific bill” but individual lawmakers could propose their own ideas, said committee co-chairman Rep. Frank Iler, R-Brunswick.
House Speaker Thom Tillis, R-Mecklenburg, told the Star News of Wilmington this week that North Carolina lawmakers shouldn’t follow the lead of other states in adopting ough laws against illegal immigrants. “It’s a very emotional issue on both sides, and we’ve got to try and hold that rhetoric off and look at things that benefit the economy, treat people respectfully, and in some cases, address some symptoms now whose problem is really rooted in federal policy. I just think we need to be very careful with it,” Tillis said.
The legislative committee hadn’t met since March as it waited for the U.S. Supreme Court to rule on Arizona’s law requiring police to question the immigration status of those they suspect are in the country illegally. The court cleared that provision of the law.
The committee’s report came as the U.S. Census Bureau released data estimating North Carolina’s Hispanic population fell from about 800,000 in 2010, or 8.4 percent of the state’s total population, to about 765,000, or 8.1 percent in 2011. The new census data confirmed a clear and sustained drop in illegal immigration nationwide after more than a decade of increases, with the number falling to about 11.1 million last year from a peak of 12 million in 2007. About 80 percent of all illegal immigration comes from Mexico and Latin America, but demographers say illegal immigration from south of the U.S. border isn’t likely to return to its mid-2000 peak due to a weakened U.S. economy, stronger enforcement, and an aging Mexican population.
The Pew Hispanic Center last year estimated that North Carolina ranked ninth in population among the states with between 240,000 and 425,000 “unauthorized immigrants,” which the research group defined as foreign-born citizens of other countries who aren’t legal U.S. immigrants.
The legislative committee said North Carolina lawmakers should urge the federal government to better enforce border security everywhere, and for Washington to delegate more authority for states to enforce immigration laws. Read More.