|
SACRAMENTO
BEE
May 17, 2008
Feinstein pushing for ag worker program
By MICHAEL DOYLE
BEE WASHINGTON BUREAU
WASHINGTON -- Sen. Dianne Feinstein has changed her tune about using
Iraq war spending bills to provide temporary legal status for illegal
farmworkers.
She used to think it was a bad idea. Not anymore.
Next week, the full Senate is expected to consider an emergency spending
bill that includes Feinstein's agricultural guest worker plan. If it
survives, the guest worker package would offer temporary legal status to
1.35 million illegal immigrant farmworkers.
"This is an emergency situation," Feinstein, D-Calif., told Senate
Appropriations Committee colleagues Thursday, adding that "agriculture
needs a consistent work force. Without it, they can't plant, they can't
prune, they can't pick and they can't pack."
Feinstein's plan modifies a more ambitious package called AgJOBS. The
original AgJOBS proposal would grant legal status to 1.5 million illegal
immigrant farmworkers. It also would put them on a path to receiving a
green card and, in time, U.S. citizenship.
The revised plan grants legal status to fewer farmworkers, and it would
not put them on an automatic path toward a green card or U.S.
citizenship. After five years, the farmworkers would revert to illegal
status if they still were in the United States.
"This to me is a fair compromise, just to get something in place," said
Manuel Cunha, president of the Fresno-based Nisei Farmers League. Cunha
stressed that the proposal is a pilot program and temporary.
Feinstein said she considered it appropriate to include the
controversial guest worker plan as an amendment to a $193 billion
emergency spending bill, the primary purpose of which is to fund the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Other lawmakers disagree.
The chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Sen. Robert Byrd,
D-W.Va., is among those opposed to Feinstein's proposal.
Byrd warned Thursday that controversial Iraq war bill amendments
probably would require at least 60 votes on the Senate floor, a high
hurdle.
"No matter how one characterizes this enormous amendment, it still
amounts to amnesty," Byrd said.
The Appropriations Committee approved the revised guest worker amendment
by a 17-12 vote.
If the agricultural guest worker amendment fails this year, lawmakers
still could try using it to build tactical momentum; for instance, by
securing promises of action next year.
Sometimes, this is why lawmakers introduce bills they know will lose in
the short run.
Some lawmakers are leery about adding extraneous provisions to war
funding bills, particularly on divisive immigration policies. In 2005,
for instance, agricultural guest worker supporters fell seven votes
short in efforts to include AgJOBS on Iraq war spending legislation.
"This is not the place for this bill," one unhappy senator said during
the April 18, 2005, debate. "I believe it is a mistake to pass this bill
on an emer- gency supplemental that is designed to provide help for our
military, fighting in extraordinary circumstances."
That senator was Feinstein.
At the time, Feinstein voiced doubts about the wisdom of legalizing so
many illegal immigrants. She since has become the Senate's biggest
supporter of AgJOBS.
Feinstein's press secretary, Scott Gerber, said Friday that "times have
changed" and that "the agriculture crisis has deepened."
As evidence, Feinstein's office circulated a photograph of a Sacramento
Valley farmer lamenting the necessity of destroying her pear crop
because of a farmworker shortage. The Western Growers Association said
Arizona and California farmers often need to hire more workers than they
are able to find.
"This was the only opportunity, at a time when very few bills are
moving," Gerber said.
Other lawmakers, too, are hopping on the Iraq war spending bill. The
Senate version, for instance, includes additional funding for low-income
housing energy assistance,
rural schools and firefighting, among other domestic programs.
|