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NEW YORK – A proposal by
Suffolk County, New York lawmakers that would require that all 15,000 licensed
contractors in the county prove their employees’ working status amounts to
political posturing that promotes discrimination, according to the New York
Civil Liberties Union.
“The federal government
already has laws in place regarding employment of immigrants,” said Donna
Lieberman, Executive Director of the NYCLU. “This legislation is an invitation
for employers to discriminate against people entitled to work but who speak
Spanish or otherwise appear ‘foreign.’ It is political pandering at its
worst.”
The measure, if successful,
would be the first of its kind in the state and follows a highly controversial
2006 law that requires contractors doing business with the county to confirm the
legal status of their employees.
“The government’s role is to
protect us from discrimination rather than promote discrimination,” said Seth
Muraskin, Director of the Suffolk County chapter of the NYCLU. “This political posturing will
only make it difficult for honest, hardworking people to work and feed their
families. Our Suffolk County officials must respect our core American values and
reject government-sponsored xenophobia once and for all.”