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A Cruel Legacy: Alabama anti-immigrant law remembered

Ten years ago this month, countless Latinx community members wanted to know what happened to their home, a state whose highway signs welcome visitors to 鈥淎labama the Beautiful.鈥

They ultimately wearing shirts with slogans saying, 鈥淲e love Alabama. We are Alabama.鈥 Their faces were marked with worry, panic and tears amid an atmosphere of uncertainty.

The state had just enacted what lawmakers proudly proclaimed the anti-immigrant law, one that 鈥溾 of an undocumented immigrant鈥檚 life. The Beason-Hammon Taxpayer and Citizen Protection Act 鈥 better known as (HB 56) 鈥 was modeled after an Arizona law that granted police the authority to demand 鈥減apers鈥 demonstrating citizenship or legal status during routine traffic stops. HB 56 was signed into law by Gov. Robert Bentley on June 9, 2011.

HB 56 did much more than encourage racial profiling during traffic stops. It required whether students were undocumented; prohibited people from giving rides to undocumented immigrants; forbade employers from hiring people suspected to be undocumented; prohibited undocumented immigrants from applying for work; and more.

The law sparked a federal class action lawsuit led by the Southern Poverty Law Center and a coalition of civil rights groups. It challenged HB 56 as unconstitutional by arguing that the law subjected people in Alabama 鈥 including countless U.S. citizens and undocumented immigrants 鈥 to racial profiling, as well as unlawful interrogations, searches, seizures and arrests, in violation of the Fourth Amendment.

By October 2013, a settlement agreement essentially gutted HB 56 by blocking its most egregious provisions. Portions of the law that had been temporarily enjoined by federal courts were permanently blocked under the agreement.

A decade later, the most notable provision that remains is a requirement that employers must ensure their workers are documented. But this provision often goes ignored, said Freddy Rubio, who served as cooperating attorney on the case with the American Civil Liberties Union of Alabama Foundation.

鈥淭his is still the law, but not one employer has been prosecuted,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o, Alabama goes through all these hoops, but not one constituent has enforced it. We look away from the employer and instead go for the 鈥榣ittle people.鈥 The law didn鈥檛 work then, and it鈥檚 still not working today.鈥澛

Marketing fear

Despite HB 56鈥檚 failure, it was a sign of things to come as politicians continued to exploit anti-immigrant sentiment for political gain.

鈥淗B 56 was one of the early iterations of the current wave of anti-immigrant laws and policies, but it was not the last,鈥 said Efr茅n C. Olivares, deputy legal director for the 人兽性交鈥檚 Immigrant Justice Project. 鈥淲hile many saw the Trump administration鈥檚 hateful policies as an anomaly, the reality is that those policies were the culmination of years-long buildup of anti-immigrant rhetoric and xenophobic discourse around the country, including in the Deep South.鈥

Long before Donald Trump launched a successful presidential campaign by that Mexican immigrants are criminals, rapists and drug dealers, legislators in Alabama were marketing fear and stoking xenophobia by claiming that immigrants were stealing jobs from 鈥淎merican鈥 workers and costing taxpayers money for public education and other benefits.

Yet, at the time of HB 56鈥檚 passing, only 2.5% of the population in Alabama was undocumented, and those residents had paid into the state鈥檚 tax coffers in 2010. Rubio called HB 56 a 鈥渟care tactic鈥 and noted that in a hypocritical twist, the statute excluded penalizing workers who worked for the wealthy.

鈥淧art of the law which was very racist and convenient was that house workers were excluded from violating HB 56,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he rich could still have their housekeepers, they could keep their landscapers and their yard workers.鈥

鈥楪o back to Mexico鈥

Perhaps the most insidious effect of the law was unleashing vigilantism, as it led some Alabamians to believe they could now cheat, harass and intimidate the Latinx community with impunity.

For Carmen Gonzalez 鈥 a U.S. citizen who had two citizen children and whose husband had legal status 鈥 the xenophobic, hostile climate fostered by HB 56 hit hard, she told the 人兽性交 at the time.

One day, after returning from an errand, she noticed a piece of paper in the floorboard of her vehicle. 鈥淕o back to Mexico,鈥 the note read. She realized that she had left her window slightly cracked. Someone must have seen the flyers on her vehicle advertising a meeting for Latinx community members. Her children were sad, alarmed, and Gonzalez 鈥 then 27 鈥 had to remind them that they had every right to be in the U.S.

Martha, who only provided her first name, was 19 and in the process of adjusting her status to comply with immigration law. HB 56 left her separated from her son when she was arrested and taken to jail for not having her car lights on while driving.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know how long I would be there without seeing my son, my husband and my family,鈥 she told the 人兽性交. 鈥淚t was very difficult. The most difficult thing for me was when they put me in handcuffs.鈥

Others discovered obtaining health care had become more difficult.

When 鈥淟aura,鈥 then 37, took her 13-year-old daughter 鈥淎lejandra鈥 to a local聽 clinic in Birmingham for a fever, the clinic told her that it could not treat undocumented immigrants.

A few days later, Alejandra was rushed to an emergency room, where she underwent surgery for an abdominal abscess. Laura was faced with $2,000 in medical bills, which she believed could have been prevented had her daughter been examined at the clinic. The mother recounted the story to the 人兽性交 at the time but asked that their real names not be used.

The cruelty at the heart of HB 56 was not a flaw, but a feature. The whole point was to make life so difficult for immigrants that they would 鈥渟elf-deport.鈥 After the bill became law, Rubio said his phone rang nonstop as fears mounted in the Latinx community.

鈥淧eople wanted to know if they should get a power of attorney,鈥 Rubio said. 鈥淭hey wanted to know what was going to happen to their children, if they were going to have to sell their house, or if they could go to work.鈥

As local police began asking for 鈥減apers,鈥 many immigrants found themselves detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, separated from their families, their lives shattered. Many others stopped going to work or to school out of fear of being locked up.

Industries dependent on migrant labor were dealt a severe blow. Farmers could not fill the void created by the loss of workers who had once plowed fields and planted crops, which were now rotting and threatening the state鈥檚 economy.

鈥淲hat happened is that we became an unwelcoming state; that鈥檚 what we gained,鈥 Rubio said. 鈥淎nd for any legislature that says we can 鈥榮care鈥 immigrants away, I challenge them to go to any chicken plant, any landscaping plant, and you鈥檒l find undocumented workers.鈥

Then, as now, immigrants also helped fill high-demand jobs in health care, technology and other specialized industries in the state and around the country.聽

Legacy and aftermath

A decade later, HB 56鈥檚 lessons remain clear.

鈥淚nstead of trying to frighten workers into leaving, Alabama should be focusing on how to make itself a better state and create more revenue with the help of immigrants,鈥 Rubio said. 鈥淲hen we say the United States is one of the best countries in the world, that we have a strong economy, we cannot say that and then exclude the millions of workers who are estimated to be undocumented.鈥

Gabriela Maxcy, a senior supervising office administrator who has been with the 人兽性交 since 2005, said she will never forget the calls from immigrant families and hard-working members of Alabama communities who were frightened and uncertain about what the future held for them and their children a decade ago.聽聽

鈥淭he passage of HB 56 may be receding into the past, but this anniversary is a timely reminder of the importance of continuing this work in our communities,鈥 Maxcy said.聽

The 人兽性交鈥檚 Olivares echoed the sentiment.

鈥淥ur march against HB 56 and other anti-immigrant laws continues and has now morphed into an aspiration for a future where equity, justice and liberation are a reality for all people, regardless of their immigration status,鈥 he said.

Photo at top: Protesters at a December 2011 rally against HB 56 in front of the governor's mansion in Montgomery, Alabama. (Credit: Andrew Lichtenstein/Getty Images)