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Southampton Mayor Epley
Stares Down Protesters at His Home
By T.J. Clemente
Small in number but sending a powerful
message nonetheless, critics of Southampton Mayor Mark Epley's day
laborers and immigration policy made good on their promise to protest
in front of his home on Harvest Lane in Southampton last week. Early
Saturday morning, a vocal group of twenty protesters carrying signs
picketed in front of the Mayor's home. The Mayor made an appearance
to personally voice his displeasure with the tactics used by those
unhappy with his plan to construct a hiring site just south of the
Seven Eleven on Aldrich Lane. Some feel this action is illegal and
insulting to the hardworking, tax-paying Southampton citizens. On
the other side are many other citizens, including heads of religious
organizations, who believe humane conditions should exist, in the
name of God, for those less fortunate.
The issue, which may play a huge
role on the national scene come the next round of elections, has
hit a nerve in the Hamptons. The protesters have legitimate claims
to the idea that the new policy does promote acceptance of the practice
of hiring illegal immigrants. Workers are usually paid in cash without
taxes, workers comp, or disability. Too often, severely injured
day workers are dumped at Southampton Hospital's emergency room
to be cared for without any way of being able to pay for the services.
On the other hand, Mr. Epley has
a point that bringing this debate to his home and neighborhood is
not healthy. Neighbors are being inconvenienced, as well as his
children and wife, because of his official duties. However, the
protesters Saturday did not seem to be sensitive to those ideas.
"So what," was perhaps the mildest response received when that point
was made. Two black, unmarked police cars were positioned on each
side of the house with non-uniformed officers taking video and photos
of the protesters.
Some of the protesters were not from
Southampton -- one came from Clearwater Beach in East Hampton. This
individual actually goes down to the border in New Mexico occasionally
to patrol and assist in preventing the massive influx of illegal
immigrants that come from south of our borders. He asked me where
my American flag was. The protesters were told they had to keep
moving or face charges. One individual claimed the mayor said he
would punch him in the nose if he didn't keep moving.
One sign read, in bold red letters,
"Epley's Slave Market." Another read, "Deport Illegal Aliens," and
a third placard had the words, "Hiring Illegal Aliens is Against
the Law."
The ironic fact was there seemed
to be almost as many reporters covering and photographing the protest
as there were protesters. However, one of the protesters vowed to
return next week with hundreds of people -- a prospect that made
one of the police officers chuckle.
Yes, democracy was at work on that
glorious morning on Harvest Lane in Southampton. The people's voices
were being heard as they practiced free speech on the neighborhood
streets of Southampton. "It is never easy to be the one who decides
who gets what, where, when, and how," as old professor Purcell defined
politics that first day at GWU in Political Science 101. Mayor Mark
Epley is learning the cost of making unpopular decisions firsthand.
In the end, the ballot box is where his policies will be evaluated.
A statement made by President Andrew Jackson best describes how
most public officials across the country are handling this issue,
calling them "mugwonks" -- meaning they were sitting on the fence
of the issue, with their mugs on one side and their "wonks" on the
other. Eventually, something must be done on the national stage
as well as the local stage before something ugly and tragic happens.
The fact that workers are here illegally must be weighed with costs
to local governments -- the fact they are human beings cannot be
missed, either. The political process can no longer ignore this
issue.
There were no supporters of the mayor
and his decisions at the protest against his policies on day workers.
The protestors were gone by eleven a.m. -- only the two black police
cars remained on each side of the Mayor's home. The scene portrayed
an embattled Mayor's home needing security because of a difficult
decision he made. Ours is a country of laws, but enforcing the law
is not always easy.
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