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So You Thought Prince William’s County Anti-Immigrant Stance Was a Good Idea Huh?

1:36 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Education|Immigration|Virginia

28 Apr 2008

schoolkids.jpgSome of our readers praised local anti-immigrant measures, like the one Prince William County, Virgina passed, but to used a cliched phrase, what happens when those chickens come home to roost. More specifically, what happens when the impact of these policies impact you, the non-immigrant, the non-Latino, where it hurts, your wallet?

Hundreds of foreign-born families have pulled their children from Prince William County public schools and enrolled them in nearby Fairfax County, Arlington County and Alexandria since the start of the school year, imposing a new financial burden on those inner suburbs in a time of lean budgets.


Public school budgets are largely based on enrollment numbers and losing school children, regardless of where they or their parents were born takes dollars away from the entire school. But the in-state migration has also left other schools, where Prince William County refugees are fleeing to, scrambling to support the new influx.

“The combination of what’s happening in Prince William and our own budget concerns increases anxiety across the system,” said Deirdre Lavery, principal of Glasgow Middle School in the Alexandria section of Fairfax, where 14 students transferred from Prince William this school year.

But I’m pretty sure that the Prince William County team who put their immigrant hating heads together could care less about the impact on other neighboring communities. As long as the immigrants (brown people) are out of site, they can be out of mind, showing just how short sighted their thinking really is.

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3 Responses to So You Thought Prince William’s County Anti-Immigrant Stance Was a Good Idea Huh?

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Just some guy

May 2nd, 2008 at 9:56 am

It’s interesting how your site can print outright racist stories and then in your comment policy, you don’t allow the same. Your phrase “immigrant hating heads together” is clearly racist. What you fail to realize is that although funds will be reduced from PWC, their cost for ESOL classes will be reduced. There are plenty of legal ways to become citizens. What part of illegal don’t you understand? The sad part is that when federal authorities fail to act, the burdon falls back on local authorities.

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Maegan la Mala Ortiz

May 2nd, 2008 at 3:15 pm

How is immigrant hating heads racist?

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Sum Yung Gai

May 2nd, 2008 at 6:53 pm

Hey, I’m one of those “brown” people, too. Specifically, I’m a black American, so I know discrimination at least as well as you do. Remember, my people were slaves in this country and are still feeling the effects of that today.

As you might expect, I welcome “brown” people (being one!). However, you are attempting to associate an objection with *illegal* immigration with *all* immigration. I see many, many pro-Hispanic groups and individuals repeatedly making this false association.

-SYG

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