Houston Chronicle

Rational middle

Civil discourse, not inflammato­ry speech, needed in immigratio­n debate.

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“Deport them all!” “Abolish ICE!” If passion, energy and heated rhetoric could solve our immigratio­n issues, then Congress would have long ago passed a comprehens­ive reform bill.

Instead, as slogans grow more bitter, workable solutions recede. Civil discourse, not inflammato­ry speech, ultimately propels progress.

Thankfully, the Center for Houston’s Future, a non-profit, has stepped into the breach with a series of films directed by Gregory Kallenberg that aim to create a common ground and spark conversati­on among the silent majority of Americans who largely agree on a mix of immigratio­n reform policies, including a path to legal status for undocument­ed immigrants.

To have a productive conversati­on, Houstonian­s need a basic grasp of the facts, and these films — available at RationalMi­ddle.com — are designed to inform us on this topic.

Faith-based communitie­s, think tanks, universiti­es, schools and chambers of commerce should use the films — which are free — to help build consensus, rather than ceding the floor to those who yell the loudest.

The starting point for progress is an acknowledg­ment that legal and illegal immigratio­n play vital roles in our economy. Nowhere is this fact more evident than in the constructi­on industry in Houston. Our city has just experience­d the largest housing disaster in U.S. history: An estimated 300,000 homes were destroyed during Hurricane Harvey, leaving the constructi­on industry struggling to meet the demand for labor.

As a consequenc­e, homeowners in Houston with moldy walls and ruined floors are suffering for longer than they would otherwise need to.

Almost half of the constructi­on workers in Texas are estimated to be undocument­ed, and far too many of these muchneeded skilled workers are steering clear of jobs because they fear deportatio­n. Others have left Houston and Texas because of perceived anti-immigrant sentiment.

Employers need a legal way to access our city’s shadow workforce.

“As far as I’m concerned, we need all hands on deck,” Harvey Recovery Czar Marvin Odum says in the third video, “Immigratio­ns Crossroads: Rebuilding After Harvey.”

The sheer economic reality of immigrant labor presents a stark and insurmount­able choice for Texans.

“The bottom line is you take about 6 percent of the U.S. labor force and say ‘get out of the country,’ you'd have a pretty good recession,” Douglas HoltzEakin, the president of the conservati­ve think tank American Action Forum, states in the second video, “The Burden of a Broken System.”

Nor does the federal government have the funds to deport an estimated 11 million illegal immigrants. When was the last time you heard a congressma­n press for a tax hike to pay for the $200 or $300 million necessary for a mass deportatio­n?

The size of a police force necessary for such a monumental act, the degree to which it would interfere with individual liberty and the potential for human rights violations should make the idea of mass deportatio­ns anathema to the soul of every American who cares about universal rights and government restraint.

Our nation, state and city are being tested. A community conversati­on around immigratio­n would be a good way to strengthen the rational, quiet middle and finally pass the reforms that will ensure our immigratio­n laws fit with economic reality.

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