NEW: RI Taxpayers Speak Out Against Immigrant Drivers’ Licenses
Wednesday, February 05, 2014
GoLocalProv News Team
Governor Lincoln Chafee this week requested the introduction of a bill that would give special drivers' licenses to undocumented immigrants. Today, Rhode Island Taxpayers, an advocacy group with the mission for honest, effective, and fiscally sound government on behalf of Rhode Island taxpayers, spoke out against the bill.
“Rhode Island's unemployment rate ticked up in December to the highest in the country,” pointed out R.I. Taxpayers spokesperson Monique Chartier. “It is stunning that the response of the Governor and advocates in the General Assembly is to make it easier for illegal aliens to take jobs away from legal immigrants and US citizens.”
RI Taxpayers also suggest that illegal immigration represents a very real financial burden to taxpayers at both the local and state level. While Rhode Island officials have not put a figure on the cost to local and state taxpayers of education, uncompensated healthcare and other services provided to undocumented immigrants, the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) estimated this cost in 2010 at $278,000,000.
“Of course, Rhode Island cannot make immigration policy or single-handedly solve the national problem of illegal immigration. But we can do a lot to mitigate its impact on our state's employment rate and already over-burdened budgets with some very reasonable policy measures that discourage illegal immigration into the state,” Chartier stressed.
Yesterday on WPRO, Chafee referred to the drivers licenses “a logical step.”
"It is a logical step only if the goal is to exacerbate the state's unemployment rate and budget woes," Chartier emphasized. "Drivers licenses for illegal aliens are a complete non-starter. Our elected officials need to enact policies that are good for the state as a whole, not just a very narrow band of special interest advocates."
Related Slideshow: Is Clay Pell the Next Lincoln Chafee?
Privileged bloodlines, prestigious prep schools, lofty political ambitions. Is Clay Pell the next Lincoln Chafee?
Below is a look at the similarities -- and differences -- between Governor Lincoln Chafee and likely gubernatorial aspirant Clay Pell.
View Larger +
Prev
Next
Family Legacy - Pell
Grandfather Claiborne Pell was Rhode Island's longest serving Senator, having served six terms from 1961 to 1997, whose legacy includes the Pell Grant, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the National Endowment for the Humanities.
A decorated coast guard lieutenant in WWII and foreign service officer, Pell's Rhode Island legacy includes the Newport Bridge being renamed the Claiborne Pell Bridge, as well as the Pell Center of International Relations and Public Policy established at Salve Regina University.
View Larger +
Prev
Next
Money - Chafee
Both Chafees and Senator Pell had to disclose as members of the U.S. Senate personal financial information -- and both a considerable net worth.
The U.S. Senate is known as the U.S. Millionaires Club -- in 2005, while Chafee was still in the Senate, Open Secrets pegged Chafee's wealth at between $40 and $63 million dollars.
View Larger +
Prev
Next
Money - Pell
In a Time piece entitled "The New Limousine Liberals", the magazine pegged grandfather Pell's net worth at $12.7 million -- in 1992.
The website Celebrity Net Worth puts wife Michelle Kwan's personal wealth at $8 million.
While Pell's first campaign finance report has yet to be made public, records show Pell gave Democratic challenger Gina Raimondo $250 during her bid for General Treasurer in 2010.
View Larger +
Prev
Next
Education - Pell
Pell attended the private boarding
Thacher School in California for high school, graduating in 2000. The school's noted
equestrian and outdoor programs require that students ride and care for a horse during their first year. Current tuition is over $50,000
Pell, a JAG who graduated first in his class from Coast Guard Direct Commission Officer School, has a JD from Georgetown University and graduated from Harvard University with high honors in Social Studies and a Citation in Modern Standard Arabic.
View Larger +
Prev
Next
Early Career -- Chafee
Chafee served as a delegate to the Rhode Island Constitutional Convention in 1985, and was elected to the Warwick City Council the following year.
He was Warwick's mayor in 1992 until 1999, when he was appointed to the U.S. Senate in 1999 when his father passed away while in office.
View Larger +
Prev
Next
Early Career -- Pell
Named to the 2011-2012 class of White House Fellows, Pell served as Director for Strategic Planning on the National Security Staff prior to his appointment by President Obama as Deputy Assistant Secretary for International and Foreign Language Education last April.
View Larger +
Prev
Next
Wife - Chafee
Chafee's wife, Stephanie Danforth Chafee, holds a B.S. in Nursing from Boston University, an
MBA from the University of Connecticut, and an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from the University of Rhode Island, helped found the Rhode Island Free Clinic in South Providence, and was featured as one of the ‘25 Models of Promise’ in Shirley Sagawa’s The American Way to Change.
Mrs. Chafee was a co-founder of Women Ending Hunger and has served on advisory boards for Miriam Hospital, Rhode Island Hospital, the Rhode Island Zoological Society and the Rhode Island Foundation. Last April, she was recognized as one of the YWCA Rhode Island's Women of Achievement.
View Larger +
Prev
Next
Wife - Pell
A decorated Olympic figure skater and world champion, Michelle Kwan went on to pursue a career in public service, serving as an American Public Diplomacy Envoy as well as on the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports -- and was recently inducted into the U.S. Figure Skating Hall of Fame.
Related Articles
Enjoy this post? Share it with others.