The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Undocument­ed drivers are wary of new law

Proponents say it will improve public safety in Georgia.

- By Lautaro Grinspan lautaro.grinspan@ajc.com

In mid-March, the appearance of police checkpoint­s on the streets of Athens sent shock waves of fear through that city’s immigrant population. People warned each other of the checkpoint­s’ locations on social media. Local community advocates helped coordinate rides for undocument­ed residents who needed to get to work or to doctor appointmen­ts — and who could have suffered significan­t consequenc­es if they were caught driving without a license.

Roughly a month earlier, Athens had been at the center of a national political firestorm, after a nursing student was found dead on the campus of the University of Georgia. The man arrested for her killing was a Venezuelan national, who authoritie­s say entered the country unlawfully.

Concern over policing among immigrant communitie­s has only grown with time. Last week Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed into law a bill that mandates closer collaborat­ion between local law enforcemen­t and federal immigratio­n officials. While they wait to see how the bill will be enforced, some immigrant rights’ advocates are rolling out initiative­s to make immigrants feel safer and avoid encounters with police that could lead to deportatio­n. At Asian Americans Advancing Justice-Atlanta, a nonprofit legal group, staff have created a free Uber rides program.

“We wanted to take part in helping people get from place to place because of the uptick of police stops and safety checks that were being put everywhere in local Athens,” said Berenice Rodriguez, civic engagement and organizing director at AAAJA.

“We also wanted to do something that could help alleviate some of the high anxiety and high pressure” that unlicensed immigrants feel when they get behind the wheel of a car.

‘Not a forever solution’

Proponents of the new Georgia immigratio­n law, House Bill 1105, say it will improve public safety.

HB 1105 requires jailers to hold any suspect suspected to be in the U.S. without authorizat­ion if that person is wanted by U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE). Sheriffs who fail to notify federal immigratio­n agents once they identify someone who may be in the country illegally face potential sanctions.

“If you enter our country illegally and proceed to commit further crimes in our communitie­s, we will not allow your crimes to go unanswered,” Kemp said ahead of signing the bill.

In past eras of more intense immigratio­n enforcemen­t across Georgia and in metro Atlanta, driving without a license was an offence that frequently resulted in undocument­ed immigrants being detained and handed over to ICE.

Advocates say a return to that reality would put undocument­ed community members in the uncomforta­ble position of risking deportatio­n every time they drive to work or to pick up children at school.

To neutralize that risk, AAAJA worked with state lawmakers this legislativ­e cycle to introduce legislatio­n that would allow immigrant Georgia residents without legal status to apply for drivers’ licenses in the state, but those efforts proved unsuccessf­ul.

Licenses for undocument­ed immigrants “is something that many other states have passed, and especially given Georgia’s limited public transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, it’d be something that would really benefit a lot of people,” said Thông Phan, senior policy associate at AAAJA.

AAAJA sees its free Uber rides program as a bandaid solution to bring immigrant residents peace of mind while the full scope of HB1105′s enforcemen­t comes to light.

According to Rodriguez, AAAJA burned through $1,000 in Uber coupons during the first 10 days of its free rides program, with most beneficiar­ies requesting transporta­tion to go to work or to the grocery store.

“It’s not a forever solution,” Rodriguez said. “We will run out of money eventually.”

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/AJC ?? Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed HB 1105 into law last week. Advocates of immigrants say the law will put undocument­ed community members in the uncomforta­ble position of risking deportatio­n every time they drive to work or to pick up children at school.
ARVIN TEMKAR/AJC Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed HB 1105 into law last week. Advocates of immigrants say the law will put undocument­ed community members in the uncomforta­ble position of risking deportatio­n every time they drive to work or to pick up children at school.

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