Civil Rights Organizations File Lawsuit Over Unconstitutional Ordinance in Escondido, CA (11/3/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
ESCONDIDO, CA -- A coalition of civil rights organizations and law firms
today filed a lawsuit against the city of Escondido, charging that the city's
anti-immigration ordinance is unconstitutional and illegal under federal and
state law. In a demand letter issued last week, the coalition urged the City
Council to avoid spending taxpayer dollars on a lawsuit defending the
unconstitutional ordinance, and pressed instead for the measure to be repealed
before the November 18 implementation date. The city failed to respond to the
letter.
The coalition, comprised of the American Civil Liberties Union, the
Fair Housing Council of San Diego, the Mexican American Legal Defense and
Educational Fund (MALDEF) and People For the American Way (PFAW), is challenging
the anti-immigration ordinance passed by the Escondido City Council on October
18, which bans renting an apartment to undocumented residents. The coalition
also includes the private law firms of Rosner & Mansfield LLP and Cooley
Godward Kronish LLP.
"Under federal law, immigration issues belong only to
the federal government," said David Blair-Loy, Legal Director of the ACLU of San
Diego & Imperial Counties. "Under state law, non-citizens have the same
property rights as citizens. Either way, Escondido has no business legislating
in this area."
The coalition said that the ordinance is in direct violation
of federal immigration law, since the federal government exclusively is charged
with enforcing immigration laws, and it puts landlords in the untenable
situation of serving as federal law enforcement agents. It also violates the
property and contract rights of both landlords and tenants, as well as federal
fair housing and privacy laws, and disproportionately discriminates against
Latino families.
"Irrespective of your position on the merits of the issue,
you cannot comply with the Escondido ordinance and comply with California law,"
said Rosner & Mansfield attorney Alan Mansfield.
Other states and
municipalities across the country have unsuccessfully attempted to adopt
similarly divisive, unnecessary and illegal measures. "Just as in Valley
Park, Missouri and Hazleton, Pennsylvania, Escondido residents will be wrongly
evicted from their apartments and discriminatorily denied access to their homes.
And just as in Valley Park and Hazleton, the city will be stopped from enforcing
such a flawed and misguided ordinance," said Kristina Campbell, a MALDEF staff
attorney.
Not only is the ordinance in violation of state and federal law,
but it also presents a humanitarian crisis given the homelessness that will
result from the law's implementation, said the groups.
"Federal and state
laws prohibit discrimination based upon national origin or other 'protected'
class status," said Mary Scott Knoll, Executive Director of the Fair Housing
Council of San Diego. "The ordinance opens a wide door for discrimination
against a host of Latino individuals and families, and exacerbates the already
tedious and difficult path to discrimination-free housing choices in our
society." The coalition has requested that the city wait to enforce the
ordinance pending a preliminary injunction hearing.
"We understand some of
the frustration over immigration. Congress and President Bush had promised us
comprehensive immigration reform to fix our broken system," said Melissa Daar,
California Policy and Field Director for People For the American Way. "But our
frustration should be directed where it belongs - at the president and his
allies in Congress, who could not come up with just and humane reform
legislation. Escondido's law comes disguised as a strike against lawlessness,
but it will instead foment discrimination against anyone who simply looks like
he or she might be an undocumented worker, citizen and non-citizen alike."
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PDF copy of the complaint is available at: http://aclusandiego.org/pdf/complaint110306.pdf
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PDF copy of the ordinance is available at: http://aclusandiego.org/pdf/EscondidoOrdinance110306.pdf
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