No. Va. county sees signs of change amid crackdown
Pedro Vargas, 24, left, with his son Francisco Vargas, 4, packs up boxes at his store, Club Video Mexico, in Woodbridge, Va., Monday, April 7, 2008. Vargas, a legal resident, has decided to move his now flagging business to Utah, months after Prince William County passed policies cracking down on illegal immigrants.
Published: May 27, 2008
Updated: May 27, 2008
WOODBRIDGE, Va. (AP) _ Business at Pedro Vargas’ store, Club Video Mexico, has slid so steeply that only eight people walked through the door one day last month.
One thing he has been selling, however, are one-way bus tickets from northern Virginia to Texas and Mexico. Soon he’ll be getting his own ticket out of town — seeking a friendlier and more lucrative place to do business.
“The last few months have been very, very bad for us,“ said Vargas, who plans to move this summer from Prince William County, about 25 miles southwest of Washington, to Utah, where he recently opened another store.
Many say Prince William’s new crackdown on illegal immigrants has created an environment so unfriendly that Hispanic people are leaving the county of more than 350,000, which according to the U.S. Census Bureau was nearly 15 percent Hispanic in 2006.
The county’s policy, which has drawn heated debate and national attention, directs police officers to check the immigration status of everyone they arrest. Beginning July 1, illegal immigrants also will be denied certain services, such as business licenses and mortgage and rental assistance.
“That’s like a smack in the face to me,“ said Vargas, a 24-year-old Mexican immigrant who is living in the U.S. legally. “I’ve been living here my whole life, and now they pass this law?“
It is difficult to measure how many Hispanic people have left and their exact reasons for leaving. In addition to immigrants’ fears over the new policy, the souring economy and mortgage crisis may be contributing to the departures. But anecdotal evidence increasingly points to a sudden cultural and economic shift in the county’s Hispanic community.
Several Hispanic business owners say their sales have plummeted. Prince William school officials say enrollment in English for speakers of other languages classes fell nearly 6 percent to 12,645 students between Sept. 30 and March 31. Other northern Virginia counties had increases.
Salvador Caballero, pastor of Trono de Jehova Pentecostal Church in Woodbridge, said attendance at his Spanish services has shrunk to about 130 people from 200 in recent months. Some people, he said, have stopped coming because they’re afraid to be out in public, and others have moved to other states or back to their home countries.
One family of seven packed up and went to Texas. “All they told me is they were going because they were afraid here,“ Caballero said. “We’re losing a lot of people here in Prince William. I hope they’re not going to be sorry later.“
Stephen Fuller, director for the Center for Regional Analysis at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va., said the policy could end up tainting the county’s image and scaring off investors.
“I think this will affect the county for several years even if they reverse the policy tonight,“ Fuller said. “The damage has been done. It’s like personal reputation; it’s hard to build that back.“
Supporters of the changes, however, say the crackdown is working as intended. Prince William Board of County Supervisors Chairman Corey A. Stewart said it already has had a “tremendous positive effect on the quality of life.“
County supervisors recently approved spending $2.6 million for the initiative. Prince William also has incurred higher-than-expected costs at the local jail due to overcrowding. Authorities were taking weeks to pick up suspected illegal immigrants rather than the 72 hours mandated under a partnership between the county and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. County officials were forced to pay to house inmates in other jails in the state.
A policy that went into effect in March directed police to check the residency status of anyone who is detained, no matter how minor the offense, if they believed the person might in the United States illegally. Prince William County supervisors changed the policy last month; now police check the immigration status of all suspects, but only after they are arrested.
Stewart says the change will reduce the possibility of racial-profiling accusations because everyone will now be checked.
But Kent Willis, executive director of the Virginia chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, said the organization still opposes the policy.
“This is an ordinance that through and through sends the message to police that they ought to be stopping and detaining people that speak a foreign language and appear to be from another country,“ he said.
Nancy Lyall, of the immigrant advocacy group Mexicans Without Borders, says she doesn’t know what effect the policy change will have, but that it appears to have already damaged the Hispanic community.
“The community is still completely devastated,“ she said. “And for those obviously that have left, there’s certainly no reason for them to go back.“
At the taco restaurant Ricos Tacos Moya, business has dropped by about 50 percent, and owner Salvador Moya said he doesn’t know how much longer he’ll be able to hold on. He was already forced to shut the doors this year on a second, much larger location in nearby Dumfries, where the bar and dance floor drew some 200 customers each weekend.
“We don’t know what we’re going to do,“ said the Mexican native, who moved to the area 20 years ago and has worked his way up from being a dishwasher. “When the law started, business went down, down, down.“
Reader Reactions
Mr. Fuller:
In all due respect, why don’t you leave the comfort of your college campus and visit the neighborhoods where illegal immigrants have adversely impacted the quality of life. Take the time to listen to county residents who don’t have an agenda or any financial gain by having these illegal immigrants remain in our county. Your opinion would change of our county.
Everyone should take a close look at www.realtytrac.com for your neighborhood. Look at the map view. It shows the terrible state that the county is in as far as realty values. We need to be chasing people and business out of our community???? Where is the improvement in quality of life??? I have not seen it. I read the police blotters, most frequently the only person whose name is spanish is the police spokeswoman.
Nice to see them leaving. Not breaking my heart any. Take your children and don’t look back. Maybe one day PW county and the surrounding areas will recover from this mess. This place looks like little Tijuana. Sickening. Go and never come back.
The business owners have the choice as legal residents or naturalized Americans to conduct business anywhere they choose, be it VA or Utah or any other state. I’m sure they will have to follow the simple rule of supply and demand wherever they conduct business. It is not the enforcement of the law that is hurting their businesses, it is the illegal aliens who are doing the damage. If Mr Vargas chooses to move to Utah then I say to him, “Have a safe trip”.
As mentioned above-illegal. Against law. We are a country made up of laws. Why should one group of people not be subject to those laws? Why is it that I, a natural born American, need visas to visit most foreign countries and am expected to abide by those visa restrictions? Why should my child’s education suffer because my local school system had to do away with arts, gt programs, to fund esl? Why should people from other countries have to wait years for their visas to be processed, quotas met-they can’t swim across oceans-and others not? I think it’s about time that PWC took a stand and hopefully we’ll be a county with a reputation of policy enforcement. I’ve seen my community take a nose dive in the past ten years-last week a house four houses down from mine had gang graffitti written all over the front of it and I am frustrated and tired of it. I hope the crackdown continues.
When I travel to Mexico for vacations, I have to fill out a form that tells the government where I am staying and how long I am going to visit Mexico. I respect their laws and fill-out the form with the info.
Illegal immigrants do not respect the laws of the USA - they enter the country illegally. Just like the bumper stickers say - “What is it about ILLEGAL that you don’t understand?“
There are gray areas on both sides of this issue and it appears never the two shall meet. People keep approaching this like it is a one-issue question and refuse to break it down to manageable parts. Oh well.
I can’t believe the non-sense on all of these comments. What’s wrong with you people. I hate to say it, but you have to much freedom of expression. But I like it like that, since I can’t recognize somebody’s behavior by how they look. Saying catering to illegals!!!!, what????.....it’s a business!!!, is there year round, everyone is welcome to go there. But still some misinformed citizens pick on it. And then saying the law is not picking on hispanics!!!, OK, tell me this, “Illegal”, what comes to your mind. Retorical question, I know what you think, hispanics. Saying they don’t pay income taxes, did you know that even illegal people pays taxes and they never get a refund. But who cares about that, nobody can track that plus it would ruin are pwc reputation even more if we keep finding are many mistakes toward this non-sense law, and the people that supports it. I hope you enjoy business close-outs and the price of many services going up. Also don’t forget the reputation of the Racist County in the U.S. that’s right I am talking about PWC, but you knew that.
Comments well said. This article definatly should of been worded with the facts! That the latino’s are upset because their businesses were kept going through the ILLIGAL’S, NOTHING to do with racism!! toward the latino community. Potomac News, you need to be careful about who you’re siding with.
Excuse me. I wonder if Mr. Caballero cares that we moved out of the Woodbridge area because we were ‘scared’ of the illegals moving in. Scared of health issues, rapes, robberies, appearance of our neighbor hood. My taxes going to pay for their kids in school. Their taxes going to pay for… oh wait - they don’t pay taxes.
If you are going to run a business that caters to people doing illegal things - I think it’s great you are leaving. After all - who here thinks we should have more drug dealers on the corner? Tell me of one community that has ever regretted getting rid of drug dealers. I will be extremely happy if this does effect the county for as many years possible.


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