
AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:
In Alabama, activists and educators are reaching out to Hispanic families. They're worried about what a strict new immigration law will mean for that community. The measure requires schools to record the immigration status of all newly enrolled students. More than 2,000 Hispanic students were absent from schools early last week. From the Southern Education Desk at member station WBHM in Birmingham, Dan Carsen has this report.
(SOUNDBITE OF TEACHER TALKING)
DAN CARSEN, BYLINE: Roughly 80 people, most of them Spanish-speaking women and children, pack the media center of Tarrant Elementary School, just north of Birmingham, Alabama. Considering the number of kids in the room and spilling out into the hallways, there's surprisingly little noise. It's a Know Your Rights meeting, meant to calm fears and familiarize families with their legal rights in light of Alabama's tough new immigration law. A middle-schooler, whose family did not want his name used, has a lot on his mind:
UNIDENTIFIED BOY: I think they're going to come in our house and come kick the door and they're going to take my mom and dad.
CARSEN: Sonja Smith is the school nurse at Tarrant Elementary. She sees the medical manifestations of the fear in the community.
SONJA SMITH: Kids have been out. They are scared to come to school. They are having panic attacks. Some of the wives have passed out. Some of the husbands, they have been staying at home because they can't go to work so they're fighting with their wives.
CARSEN: Superintendent Shelly Mize, who'd been cradling babies throughout the talk, reassured the crowd that she'd spoken with local police and that they don't have the resources to come looking for illegal immigrants. She also told concerned parents that if they're detained, say after a traffic stop, arrangements can be made for others to pick up their children up from school. Mize thinks the law gets in the way of the American Dream.
SHELLY MIZE: When families come here looking for a better life, you know, they should be allowed to strive for that, and not have to worry about sending their children to school.
CARSEN: Efforts to reassure families are coming from school systems and from groups like the Southeast Immigration Rights Network, which hosted the Know Your Rights talk at Tarrant Elementary. Longtime network activist Monica Hernandez reiterated that under the law, only numbers of undocumented students - no names - will be reported to the state Department of Education. Interim State Superintendent Larry Craven makes the same point in defending the law.
LARRY CRAVEN: I'm trying to make you understand, all were about is gathering the data. And the data, provided ultimately to the legislature will assist them with regard to a number of things. There's all sorts of legitimate reasons why those questions are being posed about the child. We're going to comply with the law.
CARSEN: But activists are vowing to continue their fight to overturn the law. As Helen Rivas of the Alabama Coalition for Immigrant Justice puts it:
HELEN RIVAS: This is not over till it's over, and as Monica said, this is going to be going on for a very long time.
CARSEN: On Friday, the Justice Department asked the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals to stay the law after a similar request was rejected by a federal judge in Birmingham. For NPR News, I'm Dan Carsen in Birmingham, Alabama.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
CORNISH: This is NPR News.
Copyright © 2011 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.
NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.