Posted on 02/15/2006 8:35:17 AM PST by devane617
ATLANTA Illegal immigrants wishing to wire money home to their families would have to pay an additional fee under legislation approved by the House Tuesday.
The narrowly focused bill took up more than two hours of sometimes-emotional debate, a harbinger of what lawmakers will face in the coming weeks when they take up more comprehensive measures targeting illegal immigration.
The Republican-backed bill, which passed 106-60 and now moves to the Senate, would require anyone wishing to wire money outside of the United States to prove they are either an American citizen or are in this country legally. Otherwise, they would have to pay a fee of 5 percent of the amount of the wire.
The bill specifies that the money collected would be used to help cover the state's costs for indigent health care. However, the provision is not binding because state law allows only certain transportation funding to come from a dedicated source.
Supporters said the estimated 225,000 illegal immigrants living in Georgia are costing taxpayers up to a $1 billion a year in services and are a major factor in overloading public schools and emergency rooms.
"The problem is real, the services that are used are real, and this remedy offers them an opportunity to pay back to the system for these services," said Rep. Tom Rice, R-Norcross, the bill's chief sponsor.
But opponents said the legislation is mean-spirited and seeks to punish hard-working people.
"What we're about to do is tax people who are doing the best they can to provide for their families," said Rep. Austin Scott, R-Tifton, the only Republican to vote against the bill. "I have a moral problem with that."
Rep. Al Williams, D-Midway, lectured his Republican colleagues for pushing legislation to allow counties to display the Ten Commandments at the same time they're targeting illegal immigrants.
"You can't insist on having the Ten Commandments hung if you don't live the Ten Commandments," he said.
Opponents also argued that illegal immigration is a federal issue and should be handled by Congress.
But Rep. John Lunsford, R-McDonough, chairman of the Legislature's Immigration Reform Caucus, said the General Assembly is stepping in because federal officials have failed to do so.
"We're trying to solve the problem, because the people of Washington are turning a blind eye to it," he said.
Before the final vote, House members amended the bill to exempt from the fee people who can prove they are paying taxes in Georgia.
However, lawmakers soundly rejected an amendment that would have increased the fee from 5 percent to 10 percent.
I moved to Georgia from Oklahoma several years ago. I've lived in Oklahoma all my life (Sooner born, Sooner bred, etc), but I married a Georgia lady, and we decided to live in Georgia.
I had a valid Oklahoma drivers license, but when I went to get a Georgia license, they required a certified birth certificate. And they weren't fooling around.
And I thought, "Good for them".
Sounds like Georgia may actually get a handle on this, then. Good luck to them!
Giving them aid and comfort by taxing them more? Immigration law is a federal responsibility. The state Georgia cannot deport people, only the feds can. All Georgia is trying to do is exact a penalty on illegals in a 'round about way. Anyone wiring to another country will have to prove they are citizens or here legally or pay the extra 5% tax. Some citizens and legal aliens are going to get hit with this if they don't have the proper documents when they go to wire money. Mostly though this will hit illegals. As it is, before this law they wouldn't get hit with this tax, now they will. The state of Georgia will benefit, and illegal aliens will pay a penalty tax on their earnings here they didn't have to pay before. I can't imagine how you think this is "giving aid and comfort to illegal immigrants."
Is Georgia going to monitor the purchase of money orders? If not, all the proposed legislation will do is put a lag in the money flow down to Mexico because illegals will no longer wire money, they'll simply buy money orders and use snail mail.
A lot of them will do that. So what? A lot will still wire money because it's safer and a lot quicker than trusting international mail.
This is why:
Section 274 felonies under the federal Immigration and Nationality Act, INA 274A(a)(1)(A):
A person (including a group of persons, business, organization, or LOCAL GOVERNMENT) commits a federal felony when she or he:
* ASSITS AN ALIEN S/HE SHOULD REASONABLY KNOW IS ILLEGALLY IN THE U.S. or who lacks employment authorization, by transporting, sheltering, or assisting him or her to obtain employment, or
* encourages that alien to remain in the U.S. by referring him or her to an employer or by acting as employer or agent for an employer in any way, or
* knowingly assists illegal aliens due to personal convictions.
Our federal laws can prosecute them.
"Our federal laws can prosecute them."
Then why don't they? Why don't the feds do something about illegals? Why is it that as a public defender I represent illegals all the time and plead them to all sorts of crimes and watch them walk away even though they have been sitting in our jail where all INS had to do was come pick them up? You think locals can do anything about illegals? Venture into reality then. The locals can't do $hit without the feds. If Georgia wants penalize illegals by taxing their wire transfers, I say more power to 'em. Good for them. You want to whine about nothing? Have at it.
"don't care about illegal aliens. They are yanking your chain if you think they do. "
Should have said: "The feds don't care about illegal aliens. They are successfully yanking your chain if you think they do."
Actually, illegal immigrants using the USPS to mail moneys from the illegal gains in illegal jobs could be considered a federal crime considering the money was earned through illegal means. This would be using the USPS to launder money which is very illegal.
ping
They don't and can't and will never send a penny to the State.
Neither proves your legally in the country.
Typical of government. If you can't stop something, regulate it. If you can't regulated it, then tax it. It's just the evolution of government failure.
Support our Minutemen Patriots!
Be Ever Vigilant!
Neither proves your legally in the country.
And there are people legally in the U.S. without visas or other documentation proving they are here legally. That includes most western Europeans, Japanese and Canadians on trips of less than 6 months.
Exactly.
What documents are those? They do not need visas to be in the U.S., just like Canadians. THey are part of the visa waiver program and only need to show a valid passport at the port of entry. It won't be until 2007 that a passport will be required of Canadians crossing at a land crossing. ANd who will train all the banks and financial institutions in understanding the wide variety and excemptions in immigration documentation?
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