SOUTH FLORIDA
SUN-SENTINEL: Homeland security chief endorses legalizing undocumented
immigrants
By Tanya Weinberg
Staff Writer
December 10, 2003
Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge told a Miami audience Tuesday that the
country should legalize millions of undocumented immigrants living in the
country.
"The bottom line is, as a country we have to come to grips with the
presence of 8 to 12 million illegals, afford them some kind of legal status some
way, but also as a country decide what our immigration policy is and then
enforce it," Ridge said at a town hall meeting at Miami-Dade Community
College.
The forum was the second in a national series organized by the nonprofit Council
for Excellence in Government, which aims to develop homeland security
recommendations for various levels of government and the public. Business and
community leaders, students and others had the chance to ask Ridge and state and
local officials about topics that included cybersecurity, airport security,
cargo inspection and immigration.
A man who identified himself as Miguel Arroyo, of Aventura, asked Ridge whether
he supported immigration legalization and whether he thought it would benefit
national security.
Ridge said he thinks the body politic is about ready to address the issue of the
illegal immigrants, who he said contribute to communities and Social Security
and pay taxes. He referred to a growing number of bills that would grant
residency to some of those living here illegally. He said one of these, which
would require all illegal immigrants to leave the country before applying for
residency, is "not workable."
"I'm not saying make them citizens, because they violated the law to get
here," he said. "So you don't reward that type of conduct by turning
over a citizenship certificate. You determine how you can legalize their
presence, then, as a country, you make a decision that from this day forward,
from this day forward, this is the process of entry, and if you violate that
process of entry we have the resources to cope with it."
At the town hall meeting and at a morning meeting with Gov. Jeb Bush, Ridge
praised Florida's level of security preparedness. This year Florida is spending
$403 million on homeland security. Most comes from the $29.4 billion in federal
money for domestic security programs.
At the morning meeting, Bush told a national security advisory council that the
state has improved coordination between law enforcement and emergency personnel
and heightened security at seaports.
"In the event of a disaster, a terrorist attack of any kind, ... today we
are better trained, better equipped, better coordinated," Bush said.
The town hall audience of about 300 was asked "Do you feel safer than you
did a year ago?" Fifty-two percent said yes, 28 percent said no, and 20
percent said unchanged.