Bills to repeal guest-worker law, driving card emerge | The Salt Lake Tribune
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(Chris Detrick | Tribune file photo) Sen. Stephen Urquhart, R-St. George, says it is time to get rid of Utah's driving privilege cards for undocumented drivers and to scrap the guest worker law for undocumented immigrants.
Bills to repeal guest-worker law, driving card emerge
Immigration » Sponsor of efforts to knock down reforms sees fight ahead.
First Published Feb 02 2012 08:12 pm • Last Updated Feb 02 2012 11:02 pm

Sen. Steve Urquhart is making good on a promise to push the repeal of key immigration reforms and Friday will publicly unveil bills to scrap the state’s guest worker law and the driving privilege card.

Both bills — drafts of which were provided Thursday to The Tribune — are expected to be highly controversial and even the St. George Republican admits they might be in for a fight to get passed.

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"If they kill a bill, they kill a bill," Urquhart said. "The sun will come up again."

But Urquhart said he’s simply representing constituents, largely in Washington County, that toe a tough line on illegal immigration. That county, for example, just put an ordinance into place that mandates companies register with E-Verify — a government-run program designed to weed out undocumented workers — or face possible revocations of businesses licenses.

His proposal to repeal HB116, the guest-worker law signed by Gov. Gary Herbert in March, would gut the original measure by removing the penalties to be paid by undocumented immigrants in order to obtain guest-worker permits.

It also would eliminate the structure for collecting taxes from undocumented workers, the Department of Public Safety’s charge to conduct background checks and run the program and would remove the restitution account for those fees that would be used to help reimburse identity theft victims.

Urquhart said he could’ve simply removed one line from HB116 — the trigger date of July 1, 2013. That would’ve had the same effect of preventing the measure from ever kicking in. But he also wanted to send a message.

"We completely lack the authority under the Constitution to establish our own immigration naturalization scheme," Urquhart, an attorney, said. "I want it off — out of the code. It shouldn’t be there."

Senate President Michael Waddoups, R-Taylorsville, said he figured the measure was coming.

"I’m not surprised," he said.

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Waddoups said he expected the repeal measure to get a committee hearing. But a look at the roster of the Senate Rules Committee — which decides if and when a bill is released for public hearing — doesn’t look especially friendly to the repeal effort, at least based on voting last session..

Of the eight members on that committee, five voted in favor of HB116 while only two voted against it. However, Chairwoman Margaret Dayton, R-Orem, was one of the guest worker law’s tougher critics.

Ron Mortensen, co-founder of the Utah Coalition on Illegal Immigration, said the pending introduction of Urquhart’s bills was welcome.

"I’m happy with a repeal. I’m happy with a repeal and replace. I’m happy with anything," Mortensen said. "But I’m also willing to leave things in place if they want to run [for re-election] on that."

But Sen. Luz Robles, D-Salt Lake City, who initiated a version of a guest-worker bill last session that became part of HB116, said the Urquhart measures were disappointing.

And Rep. Bill Wright, R-Holden, said repealing HB116, would make lawmakers look like "a bunch of clowns."

Repealing the state’s driver-privilege card is also a thorny issue for lawmakers.

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