PHOENIX - March 25 - A local Arizona anti-solicitation ordinance targeting day laborers
violates the free speech rights of individuals who express their availability to
work by standing in public areas, charged the American Civil Liberties Union,
the ACLU of Arizona and the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund(MALDEF) in a lawsuit filed today in U.S. District Court in Phoenix.
The coalition filed the lawsuit
against the town of Cave Creek and the town’s mayor and deputy mayor on behalf
of Hector Lopez, Leopoldo Ibarra and Ismael Ibarra, three longtime day laborers
and Arizona residents who in the past successfully solicited employment in Cave
Creek by standing in public areas, peaceably indicating to occupants of passing
vehicles their availability for temporary employment. Lopez, Ibarra and Ibarra
currently wish to make their availability for day labor known but fear that they
will be cited or arrested for violating the ordinance.
“This ordinance unfairly and
unlawfully singles out and punishes day laborers by taking away their right to
free speech,” said Mónica Ramírez, a staff attorney with the ACLU Immigrants’
Rights Project. “That’s just not
the way America works. The Constitution protects all
people in this country, and all persons have the right to communicate freely -
particularly in public areas - regardless of their background.”
In September 2007, the Cave Creek
Town Council passed an anti-solicitation ordinance that restricts free speech by
prohibiting solicitation of employment, business or contributions from the
occupants of vehicles when standing on or next to a street or highway -
including the sidewalk. The ordinance goes so far as to bar solicitation from
occupants in vehicles that are lawfully parked in public areas.
Before the town passed the
ordinance, day laborers - who are usually hired by homeowners to perform
services like gardening, moving, light construction, housework and painting -
solicited work in public areas.
While the town was apparently
motivated by a desire to target illegal immigration, the ordinance applies to
everyone in Cave Creek, regardless of their nationality or immigration
status. The ordinance is so
overbroad that it also applies to Salvation Army bell ringers asking for holiday
contributions and high school cheerleaders advertising a car wash on a sidewalk
or street.
The ACLU argues that individuals,
regardless of their immigration status, have the right to free speech which
includes soliciting employment.
“By attempting to take away the
First Amendment rights of day laborers, Cave Creek has endangered the free
speech rights of every group in town,” said Dan Pochoda, Legal Director of the
ACLU of Arizona. “The very people who fought to have this law passed have, in
effect, forfeited their own First Amendment rights to peaceably solicit for
their interest or cause.”
Kristina Campbell, a staff attorney
with MALDEF, said, “The Cave Creek anti-solicitation ordinance is a clear
violation of the First Amendment right to engage in free speech. Day laborers
are the most visible and vulnerable segment of the immigrant population, and
they and others who wish to exercise their First Amendment right to solicit
employment in public places have the right to do so without fear that they will
be targeted in an arbitrary and discriminatory manner and suffer fines and
arrest as a result.”
Lawyers on the case include Ramírez
and Cecillia D. Wang of the ACLU Immigrants’ Rights Project; Pochoda of the ACLU
of Arizona; and Campbell and Cynthia Valenzuela of
MALDEF.
More information on the case,
Lopez, et al vs. Town of Cave
Creek, et. al., is available online at:
www.aclu.org/immigrants/discrim/34642lgl20080325.html
###