Santa Fe New Mexican

Forget roundups: Put together compassion­ate plan

- MY VIEW: LEO MARTINEZ Leo Martinez is former 2nd Congressio­nal District candidate and former Lincoln County commission­er in New Mexico.

Donald Trump’s roundup of undocument­ed workers may bring glee to some, but think what it will do to New Mexico’s fragile economy. Consider:

At risk are some 6,000 jobs connected to commercial jobs along the border, businesses that conduct business with Mexico.

Some people do not understand that immigrants documented or undocument­ed contribute to the economy, buying essentials to live at grocery stores, car dealership­s and to the economy in general.

Schools get dollars from the state per pupil whether documented or undocument­ed. Get rid of undocument­ed children — or of U.S. citizen children because their parents are undocument­ed — and then get rid of teachers who make a living by teaching and put another hole in the economy of the state and local government­s.

Some people think that undocument­ed workers only take from the system and do not contribute. They have to have a place to live, so they rent or buy through a documented relative, thereby paying taxes. Many also pay federal income taxes.

Pecans, pistachios and chile crops — who do you think picks these crops? Hardworkin­g undocument­ed workers who want nothing more than to support their families.

Who do you think does most of the ranch work in New Mexico tending to alfalfa fields and getting it ready for market? Documented or undocument­ed workers?

It is very interestin­g to note that Trump is planning to hire 10,000 U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t workers and 5,000 more border patrol agents to keep us safe from undocument­ed workers who toil in our fields and who could possibly use their rakes and shovels as weapons against us.

Instead of building a wall to protect us from these undocument­ed workers, let’s put these new 15,000 agents along with the thousands of existing agents currently watching the border and let them hold hands. I am sure there are plenty of them to reach from Texas to California and it would be less expensive than a $20 billion Trump wall. As it is, we have almost 10 border patrol agents per linear mile, and this does not include another 6,000 Office of Field Operations officers who are at the ports of entry and 6,000 (i.e., one-fourth of all of ICE staff ) at the U.S./Mexico border.

When I ran for Congress in 2002, I advocated for work permits for Mexican workers to come and pick the crops legally. If they committed no crimes, they could have a path to citizenshi­p. That went nowhere, but the problem still exists and our U.S. Rep. Steve Pearce, a Republican, has not found a way to solve the problem.

Comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform is the answer, but it has not happened. Why not? Because the Republican Party cannot come to grips that sanctions against employers that hire undocument­ed workers cannot happen because many employers are Republican­s.

We are in a dire situation, with families being torn apart and families fearful of the immigratio­n police. Let’s bring these undocument­ed workers and children, who were brought to this country at a young age at no fault of their own, bring them into the sunlight and welcome them to pay taxes and contribute to their country and communitie­s.

Compassion­ate comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform is the answer — not random roundups. Immigrants are not animals.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States