Baltimore Sun

Maryland should allow noncitizen­s to fill key health and public safety job vacancies

-

The usual anti-immigrant talking heads in the right-wing media may not realize it, but the U.S. military — the one branch of government they reliably see as virtuous — does not require its recruits to be U.S. citizens or even born in this country. Indeed, thousands of immigrants, all living permanentl­y and legally in the United States, enlist each year. Americans should be grateful for their collective service. They defend their adopted homeland and risk their health and well-being so that the rest of us can live safe from the nation’s enemies. So why not allow them to provide the same sort of protection for our homes, schools, public areas and places of business from more run-ofthe-mill threats?

In recent years, states have been grappling with whether to hire noncitizen­s as police officers and, in a related issue, whether such individual­s should also be given the opportunit­y to be licensed health care workers. In both cases, there are often chronic labor shortages aggravated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Under Maryland state law, noncitizen­s can be certified only if they have applied to be U.S. citizens and earn that status within five years. That could change this year, however; the General Assembly is now considerin­g legislatio­n allowing any honorably discharged veteran to be certified as a police officer.

The measure is bound to prove controvers­ial — as all matters involving immigratio­n tend to be under the current political climate — but it shouldn’t be. Rarely is there a better opportunit­y to match an unmet need with underutili­zed talent. Men and women who can be trusted to patrol the streets of Kandahar or Kirkuk can surely be trusted to walk a beat in Kenilworth Park or Keswick. That’s not to suggest we would expect police work to be about firepower; it isn’t. But new arrivals with their multicultu­ral and bilingual talents would seem to bring their own set of skills to the table. Who better to help provide outreach to immigrant communitie­s than someone who is a fellow immigrant? Meanwhile, the Baltimore Police Department has experience­d chronic staffing problems, often losing officers faster than it can recruit replacemen­ts

despite signing bonuses and other incentives. Other police department­s are in the same boat.

It is particular­ly laughable that current Maryland law requires police officers to be awarded citizenshi­p within five years. Not just because the wheels of the federal bureaucrac­y turn slowly but because it suggests that something downright tragic happens if a police officer who was regarded as fully qualified during his first 4 years and 11 months of service had to be shunned after four more weeks in the job. As state Sen. Cheryl Kagan, a Montgomery County Democrat and the bill’s lead Senate sponsor points out, the legislatio­n simply allows police department­s to cast a “wider net” for recruits.

Sen. Kagan has another piece of legislatio­n, Senate Bill 187, set to be heard Feb. 7 before the Senate Finance Committee that would enable a similarly broadened net for those seeking to fill jobs in a variety of health occupation­s. It doesn’t change any of the standards for licensing involving training, education or other experience, but it would prevent licensing

boards from requiring citizenshi­p. Given the health care workforce shortage in Maryland and elsewhere, why is anything beyond proof of legal presence required? Consider, for example, that Maryland taxpayers already pay for public education for such individual­s. And now, just at the moment when they can contribute to society in such positions as home health care aide or nurse, we would deny them that opportunit­y? At least 14 other states have chosen to toss citizenshi­p as a requiremen­t for occupation­al licensure. Maryland should join the club.

One of these days, we hope the anti-immigrant forces in Congress will recognize what certain people see only as a “border crisis” also offers an opportunit­y to grow the U.S. economy. That’s not to endorse “open borders” but to recognize that current U.S. immigratio­n policy is failing to tap the talents of millions of people who could be valued contributo­rs to society if only given a path to a green card, let alone citizenshi­p. What a waste. But what an opportunit­y, too.

 ?? AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Baltimore City Police Commission­er Michael Harrison welcomes the new class of 22 police officer trainees at the University of Baltimore on orientatio­n day at the Baltimore Police Academy in March 2022. They undergo 30 weeks of training at the academy, followed by 10 weeks of field training.
AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN Baltimore City Police Commission­er Michael Harrison welcomes the new class of 22 police officer trainees at the University of Baltimore on orientatio­n day at the Baltimore Police Academy in March 2022. They undergo 30 weeks of training at the academy, followed by 10 weeks of field training.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States