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
So, Utah has the reputation of being an easy mark for illegal latinos to locate. Poor Pedro is losing his illegal customers due to Prince William enforcing the law. Just move to Utah, open your latino customer based business and profit off the backs of illegals. But a caution….....illegal immigration has become a hot issue here, also and the construction industry is in the dumps. You may have to move your business again. Maybe across the Rio Grande.
The only criticism that can be made is the PWC failed to enforce the laws from the start.
Come on people, lets get down to the facts. We are talking about people who are ILLEGAL. For those of you that are unfamiliar with that term, it means that they are breaking the law! And I have a news flash, this is not a Hispanic issue, so please stop with the whole angle that everyone is picking on Hispanics. PWC is enforcing a law for all nationalities. If there happens to be that a majority of the law breaking ILLEGAL immigrants is Hispanic, again, why am I to be sympathetic for them?
Another fact that people seem ignore is that the ONLY people being asked their immigration status are those who are doing something wrong or involved with some unlawful activity and breaking more laws!!! If you are breaking the law to begin with, what are you doing drawing more attention to yourself? You deserve to get deported.
How in the world can anyone justify that this is somehow unfair to anyone? What is unfair is that this huge population of people has been breaking the law for years now and the government has turned a blind eye. While county resources and Welfare resources are getting consumed to support those that are here and unable to support themselves. Yet, they continue to have more children here and they continue to bring more family here.
You came here breaking the law. Now, finally, the government is enforcing the law. You want me to be sympathetic that you are now getting caught breaking the law? A little ridiculous, don’t you think?
And for those of you whose bread and butter had relied on the illegal population, sorry about your bad luck. Again, you will get no sympathy from me for making a buck all these years off people who were here ILLEGALLY and now you have to move? Well maybe you should have catered to those PWC residents who are actually law-abiding citizens? That would have been a more honest way to make a living and would have secured you a more stable earning power for the long haul.
The tragedy of all of this is the children. Shame of the government for turning a blind eye this long and allowing things to get to this point. I’m not denying that they are some very sad and troubling stories that have arisen out of the sudden enforcement of these immigration laws. Yes, it angers me that the governments failure to enforce these laws from the beginning has yielded a crisis in the community and for families. But it doesn’t make sense for anyone to use that as a reason to stop enforcing the law.
Bottom line.. it’s against the law to be here illegally. If you can’t get here illegally, don’t come. If you come, get settled and get caught, shame on you for putting your family in that situation and for not finding a more stable solution to your problems.
This piece of journalistic propaganda could have been phrased differently.
“Our business catered to a portion of the population who entered the country illegally, decimated the economy by avoiding income taxes and consuming public services, and showed no desire to assimilate. Please feel sorry for us.“
so many sob storys here.. I think i might cry.
Pretty damn disgraceful…....Many areas of the county look like crap, and i wonder if we will ever recover. What we are seeing is people leaving because of a lack of construction jobs, and can you imagine any ‘legal’ Latinos wanting to move here? Nice goin guys…..
Well it all comes home to roost. IF the MWB and La Rexa people had truly had their constituents’ best interests at heart, they would have educate them better about the resolution to include the FACT that people who are being checked are detained (previously) for a crime or another violation, or arrested. Police officers never had the ability to stop someone just because of the color of his or her skin or his or her accent and check their status. MWB and La Reza perpetuated this fear, and fed it to further their own cause.
The resolution did not cause businesses to leave. The economy is down all over, and HELLOOOOOO, it is not just immigrants or any one race that is feeling the pain. As was said a few years sgo, it’s the economy, stupid. to blame the resolution for this is so far fetched and slanted on many levels.
Stories like this are nothing more than self serving. It’s about time the media report facts that can be supported, not just allegations and innuendos.
HA! You take Stephen Fuller seriously? Do you realise he is a board member for the company that got busted in Richmond a few weeks ago for hiring illegal aliens?? HAHAHAHA!!!
Of course one whom profits off of illegal labor is going to be against any “crack down”! I’m still laughing!
Is this called the Prince William Homogenized Program? Which group is next?
If you cater to illegals you should be worried. If your business relies on illegal trade you should be worried. The hispanic community has created a nightmare situation for themselves by catering to illegals. Our town will be fine without illegals. My neigborhood is very peaceful now. I hope the illegals are getting it and not just invading another unsuspecting town.


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