ACLU Applauds Repeal of Anti-Immigrant Ordinance in Riverside, NJ (9/17/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
RIVERSIDE, NJ - The American Civil Liberties Union praised
Riverside’s township council vote tonight to repeal an unlawful ordinance that
would have punished landlords and employers for renting to or employing
individuals it classified as “illegal” immigrants. Tonight’s vote was prompted
by a lawsuit brought by a coalition of residents, businesses and landlords
represented by the ACLU, the ACLU of New Jersey, the Puerto Rican Legal Defense
and Education Fund, the People For the American Way Foundation, and the law firm
of Ragonese, Albano & Viola.
“We commend
Riverside for repealing this
wrong-headed law,” said Ed Barocas, Legal Director at the ACLU of New Jersey.
“In addition to being illegal, the passage of this ordinance promoted distrust
of immigrants - including those here legally - and fueled xenophobia and
discrimination.”
The lawsuit against
Riverside, Riverside Coalition of Business Persons, et al. v.
Township of Riverside, contended that the ordinance overstepped the
township’s authority, was too vague, unfairly put businesses at risk and
violated civil rights under state law and the New Jersey Constitution.
“State law simply does not permit
Riverside to strip immigrants of
their rights,” said James Katz of Spear Wilderman, P.C., cooperating counsel for
the ACLU and the ACLU of New Jersey. “Nor does
it allow cities to control the rental or hiring decisions of
Riverside businesses and landlords.”
The ACLU has challenged a number of anti-immigrant ordinances
in court, including those passed in Hazleton,
PA;
Escondido,
CA; Valley
Park, MO; and
Farmers Branch,
TX.
Courts have ruled against each of these ordinances on a temporary or
permanent basis. The Riverside ordinance is the first of
the challenged anti-immigrant ordinances to be fully repealed by a government
body vote in advance of a court ruling.
“Riverside
properly recognized that trying to enforce this ordinance would be a waste of
taxpayer money and a violation of the law," said Omar Jadwat, an attorney with
the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project. “Other cities considering similar
ordinances should take note of this vote and the fact that these discriminatory
and unlawful laws do not hold up in court. Rather than blow city resources on
unlawful and mean-spirited ordinances, responsible officials should seek to
combat discrimination and ensure that their municipalities are fair for all of
their residents."
The so-called “Riverside Township Illegal Immigration Relief
Act” was never enforced. After the ACLU filed the lawsuit in the Superior Court
of New Jersey in Burlington County, the parties agreed that the ordinance could
not be enforced pending the final outcome of the lawsuit. Confronted with the
lawsuit and the uniform failures of similar ordinances elsewhere, the
township of
Riverside decided to repeal the
ordinance.
In addition to Barocas, Katz, and Jadwat, lawyers in the case
include Andrew Viola and Michael Albano of Ragonese, Albano & Viola; Foster
Maer and Jackson Chin of PRLDEF; Reggie Mitchell of People for the American Way;
and Lucas Guttentag, Lee Gelernt, and Jennifer Chang of the ACLU Immigrants’
Rights Project.
The complaint is online at
www.aclu-nj.org/downloads/RiversideComplaint.pdf
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