Lost Angeles: Some Costs of Illegal Immigration Added Up
01/21/2011
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Los Angeles County is the example from hell of what happens when illegal immigration is allowed to run amok. Most of the elected officials there are useless at best or more Raza than American, like LA Mayor Villaraigosa who was president of the UCLA chapter of the anti-American MEChA group.

The County was home to 9.8 million residents as of 2009, where 54 percent spoke a language other than English at home according to the 2000 Census.

County Supervisor Michael Antonovich has been keeping track of the taxpayer’s expenditures for services received by illegal aliens, and he has been publishing occasional press releases to inform his constituents and the country of the steep cost of open borders.

The Supervisor appeared with Greta van Susteren for a few minutes of explanation about the enormous price tag:

A different sort of discussion occurred when talking head Megyn Kelly worried about starving babies, as if illegal aliens’ kiddies would die if we taxpayers didn’t feed them.  

Welfare Tab for Children of Illegal Immigrants Estimated at $600M in L.A. County, Fox News, January 19, 2011

Welfare benefits for the children of illegal immigrants cost America’s largest county more than $600 million last year, according to a local official keeping tabs on the cost.

Los Angeles County Supervisor Michael Antonovich released new statistics this week showing social spending for those families in his county rose to $53 million in November, putting the county government on track to spend more than $600 million on related costs for the year – up from $570 million in 2009.

Antonovich arrived at the estimate by factoring in the cost of food stamps and welfare-style benefits through a state program known as CalWORKS. Combined with public safety costs and health care costs, the official claimed the ”total cost for illegal immigrants to county taxpayers” was more than $1.6 billion in 2010.

”Not including the hundreds of millions of dollars for education,” he said in a statement.

Antonovich’s figures, though, center on costs generated by American-born children of illegal immigrants. Isabel Alegria, communications director at the California Immigrant Policy Center, said it’s ”unfair” to roll together costs associated with both illegal immigrants and U.S.-born citizens.

”Those children are U.S. citizens, children eligible for those programs,” Alegria said.

She also questioned the authenticity of Antonovich’s numbers regarding health care and public safety – though for the welfare program statistics, Antonovich cited numbers from the county’s Department of Public Social Services.

Antonovich acknowledges that the children whose benefits he’s focusing on are U.S.-born. But he argues that the money is collected by the illegal immigrant parents, putting a painful burden on taxpayers, including those who are legal immigrants.

”The problem is illegal immigration. … Their parents evidently immigrated here in order to get on social services,” Antonovich spokesman Tony Bell said. ”We can no longer afford to be HMO to the world.”

He said the state should cut back on these social benefits. According to the November statistics, that cost accounted for 22 percent of all food stamp and CalWORKS spending in the county.

Over the summer, the Federation for American Immigration Reform also looked at these kinds of costs nationwide to get an idea of the burden to local governments at a time when many are grappling with budget deficits.

The organization reported that the cost of illegal immigration stands at about $113 billion a year. Nearly half of that amount went toward education costs, according to the study. Costs were naturally higher in states with large illegal immigrant populations – in California, the total annual cost was pegged at $21.8 billion.

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