
ISSUED BY: GCIS Communications Command Center
SOURCE: The Washington Times
14February2011 8:33amEST
GCIS INTELLIGENCE UPDATE: PHOENIX — Republican lawmakers want to widen Arizona’s illegal immigration crackdown with a proposal to require hospitals to check on whether patients are in the
country legally, causing outrage among medical professionals who fear becoming de facto immigration agents under the law.
The medical industry ripped the bill Monday as it was scheduled for a hearing by the state SenateJudiciary Committee. Doctors envisioned scenarios in which immigrants with contagious diseases such as tuberculosis would stay home from the clinic or hospital and put themselves and the public at a grave health risk.
“This is making us into a police state that will try to catch people when they are sick,” said Dr. George Pauk, a retired physician with an organization called Physicians for a National Health Program. “Do we want to stop sick people from coming in for health care?”
Arizona’s is the first legislature to take up such a measure amid a national push in conservative states to crack down on illegal immigration, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Arizona lawmakers ignited the debate a year ago when they passed a bill that required local police, while enforcing other laws, to question the immigration status of those they suspect are in the country illegally. A judge later put that provision on hold. (read full report)
