Los Angeles Times

L.A. may end Arizona boycott

- By Emily Alpert Reyes emily.alpert@latimes.com

Nearly eight years ago, Los Angeles lawmakers decided to protest an Arizona law targeting illegal immigratio­n by barring city employees from traveling there on municipal business and urging city department­s to avoid doing business with Arizona firms.

Now the city is poised to roll back those restrictio­ns. At a committee meeting Friday, council members recommende­d ending the boycott. The move comes after a series of legal battles eliminated or softened key parts of the hotly contested law.

There was no debate over the decision at the meeting, but Council President Herb Wesson, who heads the committee, said in a statement afterward that “court rulings on its major provisions effectivel­y annulled the law.”

“Under the advice of our city’s immigrant advocate, we saw no further reason for keeping the boycott,” he said.

Some L.A. lawmakers had also become skeptical of the travel ban after the City Council repeatedly loosened the rules to allow travel to Arizona for meetings and training and to keep buying Arizona products.

“If you’re going to do a protest action like that, you have to be very serious about it,” Councilman Marqueece Harris-Dawson said Friday. “The city just hasn’t done that.”

The decision on whether to rescind the restrictio­ns now goes to the entire council for approval.

The polarizing law, SB 1070, allowed officers to arrest a person without a warrant if the officer believed the person had committed an offense that could lead to deportatio­n. The law also made it a crime for people in the country illegally to seek work, and required police to check the immigratio­n status of people they suspect are in the country illegally when they are stopped for other reasons.

At the time, a majority of Americans backed the Arizona law, according to a national survey. Illegal immigratio­n opponents ushered in similar bills in other states.

But SB 1070 drew sharp condemnati­on from immigrant rights groups and spurred boycotts from several cities. L.A. lawmakers vowed to halt city travel to Arizona and forgo contracts with its companies.

L.A. did stop some official travel to Arizona, bypassing a National League of Cities event and deciding not to send a Los Angeles Police Department team of helicopter pilots to a training conference.

But the council also repeatedly approved exemptions to the rules, and in some cases, city staffers appear to have flown to Arizona without seeking an exemption, according to a city report reviewing the policy.

At a meeting two years ago, Councilman Gil Cedillo said he wasn’t upset about L.A. lifting the rules so it could carry out important business, but “what I find offensive — or unnecessar­y — is for us to pretend that we have a boycott” while approving exemption after exemption.

Cedillo had been a sharp critic of SB 1070, but he derided the city restrictio­ns as a “so-called boycott.”

Several parts of the controvers­ial law were struck down by the Supreme Court six years ago.

Immigrant rights groups later reached an agreement with the Arizona attorney general that stopped requiring police to demand papers from people suspected of being in the country illegally. Under the agreement, the attorney general instructed police not to prolong a stop “solely for the purpose of verifying immigratio­n status.”

“The political landscape is different now” in Arizona, said Joseph Villela, director of policy and advocacy for the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights in Los Angeles.

As the city reexamines and possibly ends the Arizona boycott, “this is an opportunit­y for the City Council to have conversati­ons about other states” such as Texas that have passed similar laws, Villela added. “And to make sure that when L.A. takes a stand, it has to be more than symbolic.”

 ?? Jonathan Gibby Getty Images ?? PROTESTERS oppose SB 1070, Arizona’s controvers­ial immigratio­n law, during a 2012 march in Phoenix.
Jonathan Gibby Getty Images PROTESTERS oppose SB 1070, Arizona’s controvers­ial immigratio­n law, during a 2012 march in Phoenix.

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