SMITHSBURG, MD. — Some Marylanders want nothing to do with Delegate Neil C. Parrott and his clipboard. Others approach him as if they’ve been looking for him.
The Washington County Republican, who is leading efforts to block the recently passed Dream Act that would allow in-state college tuition for many illegal immigrants, might have been the most popular man at the Smithsburg Pride Days festival last weekend in his home county.
Many residents in the town of about 3,000 were eager to sign. Few turned down his requests for signatures, and some sought him out or stopped their cars for a chance to help.
“Everyone that I talk to in this area is completely against the bill,” resident Shawn Weddle said. “When I have my taxpayer dollars supporting something that by its name is illegal, to me that’s a complete waste and a complete slap in the face to the taxpayers of Maryland.”
Mr. Parrott and other petition organizers have until June 30 to collect 55,736 valid signatures from Maryland voters in order to force a 2012 referendum on the issue. A more immediate deadline looms next week, as they have until Tuesday to submit one-third, or 18,579, of those signatures to the state Board of Elections.
Mr. Parrott said Tuesday that organizers have collected 25,000 signatures that they think are valid. Many more, though, could be needed, because petitions typically have hundreds or thousands of signatures rejected as a result of errors and technicalities.
“We’ve passed the bare minimum, but we need a surge this week,” said Mr. Parrott, who has set a goal of 35,000 signatures by Tuesday. He and volunteers began collecting signatures four weeks ago.
The Dream Act would allow in-state tuition for college-aged illegal immigrants who have graduated from Maryland schools and come from taxpaying families. The students would start at community colleges but also could pay the in-state rate if they matriculate to a four-year school.
Opponents have visited all of the state’s 23 counties and Baltimore asking for signatures, while relying on residents to download and circulate their own copies of the petition from the website mdpetitions.com.
They say they have been received warmly at numerous events — notably collecting 1,800 signatures at last month’s Towsontown Spring Festival in Baltimore County — and gained bipartisan support.
Organizers have said that 25 percent of people who have downloaded the online petition are registered Democrats. The site accesses the voter information of visitors who enter their names and ZIP codes.
The petition has not played as well in places like Montgomery County — a heavily Democratic area with a growing Hispanic population — where Mr. Parrott spent a recent morning coaxing signatures and passing out fliers at the Shady Grove Metro station.
Many residents declined to sign the petition. One young woman politely explained that she works with Hispanic youths. A federal employee who declined to give his name doubled back after reading the flier to testily ask Mr. Parrott, “Do you really think immigrants don’t deserve a college education?”
Among the supporters was Denise Zdelar of Gaithersburg.
“They would be taking the place of a U.S. citizen’s spot,” Ms. Zdelar said. “That’s not fair to the kids in the United States who were brought up as a U.S. citizen.”
they're directing their anger towards high school kids who had nothing to do w/economic downfall. Ok, no prob. Karma is a b!xch. Hope their weed smoking kids who don't deserve a seat in college will drive economy into a pitfall and beg China to lend more money.