Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Lawmakers Try Again On English Language

Lawmakers will again seek to make English the official language of Oklahoma government this year.
Reps. Randy Terrill, George Faught, Mike Christian and Senator Anthony Sykes today said they are filing legislation to send a proposed constitutional amendment to Oklahoma voters that would make English the state’s official language.
“As our common American language, English and the ‘melting pot’ process it supports has made the United States the most successful multi-ethnic nation in history,” said Terrill, R-Moore. “However, that success has been threatened by politically correct multilingualism that divides America into separate communities with little in common except geographic location. Our legislation will promote cohesion and end the divisiveness.”
“Our government should encourage legal immigrants to assimilate so they can access the American dream, but current law actually discourages that process,” said Faught, R-Muskogee. “Impeding efforts to help people become fluent in English condemns them to a low-income life in the shadows of our society. We need to help legal immigrants join American society, not ostracize them.”
“Making English the official language of state government is not only the humane thing to do, it’s also cost-effective,” said Sykes, R-Moore. “Right now, Oklahoma taxpayers can be forced to pay for government materials to be printed in up to 300 different languages or even pay for individual translators in every language. We are already seeing large sums spent on Spanish-language driver’s manuals no one uses while facing a shortage of English manuals. It’s time to eliminate that waste and be efficient with taxpayer funds.”
“This is a common-sense idea that’s time has come,” said Christian, R-Oklahoma City. “There is no compelling reason for the state to waste money printing documents or manuals in languages seldom or never used in Oklahoma.”
More than 30 states have already approved official English laws and so have more than 50 nations around the globe.
Under the provisions of the legislation, which will be very similar to last year’s Senate Bill 163, private individuals and businesses will still be allowed to use whatever language they choose. Only government activities would be affected.
The bill will also contain exemptions for the languages of Oklahoma’s 39 federally recognized Native American tribes and allows the use of both Braille and sign language in government services. The legislation also contains a number of other specific, narrowly tailored exceptions for things like public health and safety, as well as trade, commerce and tourism.
The bill’s authors cited three main reasons to make English the official language of Oklahoma government.
First, the bill will prevent the state from being compelled to provide taxpayer-subsidized services in any language other than English. Terrill noted that issue has become more urgent thanks to a federal government investigation of the Oklahoma Department of Public Safety over allegations the agency violated the civil rights of two Iranian immigrants who were not provided written driver’s license exams in Farsi, the chief language of Iran.
Second, making English the official language avoids all of the cost, burden and conflict associated with bilingualism and multilingualism.
Most importantly, the lawmakers said making English the official language of state government would promote assimilation for all immigrants.
If approved by voters, the official English law would have three main impacts. First, there would no longer be any bilingual or multilingual driver’s license tests. Second, when citizens call a state agency, they will no longer be greeted by a “press 1 for English” prompt. Finally, there will no longer be any official state forms or signage in any language but English, unless covered by one of the specifically enumerated exceptions previously noted.

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