Wautoma, WI
Current Conditions
0:56 AM CDT
Clear
Temperature
67°F
Dew Point
54°F
Humidity
63%
Wind
CM at 0 mph
Barometer
30.05 in. F
Visibility
10.00 mi.
Sunrise
05:13 a.m.
Sunset
08:43 p.m.
Evening Forecast (7:00pm-Midnight)
Temperatures will range from 75 to 53 degrees with clear skies. Winds will remain steady around 5 miles per hour from the southeast. No precipitation is expected.
7-Day Forecast
Wednesday
75°F / 47°F
Clear
Thursday
85°F / 50°F
Sunny
Friday
94°F / 68°F
Scattered Showers
Saturday
87°F / 70°F
Light Rain
Sunday
87°F / 70°F
Scattered Showers
Monday
85°F / 71°F
Light Rain
Tuesday
88°F / 71°F
Partly Cloudy
Detailed Short Term Forecast
Issued at 0:56 AM CDT
Wednesday...Temperatures will range from a high of 75 to a low of 47 degrees with clear skies. Winds will range between 3 and 7 miles per hour from the southsouthwest. No precipitation is expected.
Overnight ...Temperatures will range from 51 to 47 degrees with clear skies. Winds will be light from the south. No precipitation is expected.
Thursday...Temperatures will range from a high of 85 to a low of 50 degrees with mostly clear skies. Winds will range between 3 and 6 miles per hour from the south. No precipitation is expected.

NMPF responds to ruling on Arizona's immigration law

June 28, 2012 | 0 comments

The Supreme Court struck down a significant portion of Arizona's effort to prosecute and deter illegal immigrants, but left one key part of that state's laws intact, according to Jerry Kozak, president and CEO of the National Milk Producers Federation (NMPF).

The mixed high court ruling, along with the recent executive order by the Obama administration to stop the deportation of some younger, undocumented individuals, fully illustrates how that, regardless of which path is chosen, the few options for immigration reform remain controversial and divisive.

At the same time, Kozak said, these developments also show how critically necessary it is to resolve the immigration policy conundrum, especially for farmers and other employers concerned with maintain and recruiting a workforce.

The court upheld the law's directive that state and local police may check the immigration status of people they stop when they suspect them of lacking legal authorization to be in the United States.

The justices unanimously stated that federal law already requires immigration officials to respond to status checks from local authorities, and therefore federal immigration law does not preempt this section of the Arizona law.

However, much of SB1070 was overturned as interfering in the federal government's role as the sole arbiter of immigration law.

In a 5-3 ruling, the court said Arizona in effect had tried to set up a parallel enforcement system that punished illegal immigrants more harshly and interfered with congressional authority over the nation's borders.

The court rejected parts of the state law that made it a state crime for illegal immigrants to seek work, to fail to carry immigration papers, and that authorized warrantless arrests of people suspected by state and local police of committing deportable offenses.

According to Kozak, this decision highlights the need for continued efforts to reform federal immigration laws, and NMPF will continue to work with regulators and lawmakers to create workable solutions for dairy farmers and their workers.

Post a Comment

Limit of 2000 characters,  characters remaining

Preview

Discussion guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use

Please login to post a comment.

Page Tools

Search