Monday, June 29, 2009

Opposition grows to immigration prison in Arizona

There is opposition arising to a proposed 1,500-inmate federal immigration prison being considered for southern Arizona on the Tohono O’odham Indian reservation.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona has written U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano opposing the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center near the Arizona border with Mexico. The ACLU notes federal police and other law enforcement already detain about 3,000 illegal immigrants on a given day. Many of those are undocumented immigrants from Mexico awaiting deportation from the U.S.

Posted by Weiting Wu

Click HERE for full article

Activists launch immigration reform campaign

ATLANTA - Representatives from labor, faith, business and immigrants' rights groups gathered Monday outside the Capitol to launch the Georgia arm of the national Reform Immigration FOR America campaign.




The Atlanta launch, attended by about 25 local activists, was one of more than 30 planned in 20 states Monday. The campaign is being launched nationally with a news conference Wednesday in Washington, the kickoff of a three-day summit expected to bring together 700 grass-roots advocates from 35 states.

http://chronicle.augusta.com/stories/2009/06/02/met_526073.shtml

Posted by Sandra Robles

Colleges look at policy for illegals

by Philip D. Brown

A policy is currently being drafted that would allow undocumented immigrants who graduated from a U.S. high school access to the North Carolina Community College system.The Policy Committee of the Board of North Carolina Community Colleges requested late last week a draft policy be prepared for them to review, according to a state community colleges spokesperson.North Carolina Community College System Director of Marketing and External Affairs Megen George said the policy committee asked for the draft policy to be developed for review at a special working session August 19.“The draft policy would be similar to the policy that is currently in place in the University of North Carolina system,” George said. “That policy allows the admission of undocumented immigrants, and they have to pay out-of-state tuition.”

http://www.yourdailyjournal.com/pages/full_story/push?article-Colleges+look+at+policy+for+illegals%20&id=2773243-Colleges+look+at+policy+for+illegals

posted by Sandra Robles

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Goal of foundation's grants is integrating immigrants into Southern California life

Posted By Crystal Moreno

Aiming to accelerate the integration of immigrants into Southern California life, a leading California foundation will announce today that it is issuing $900,000 in grants to help ease conflicts between blacks and Latinos in Pasadena, promote worker rights in Artesia, organize to bring supermarkets to minority neighborhoods and other initiatives.

Visit: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-immigrant19-2009jun19,0,1602810.story

New coalition pushes for eased immigration rules

Posted By Crystal Moreno

New coalition pushes for eased immigration rules

Inland supporters of liberalized immigration laws Monday rallied in San Bernardino to take part in a nationwide call for a path to legalization for many of the nation's 12 million illegal immigrants.


Visit: http://www.pe.com/localnews/immigration/stories/PE_News_Local_S_immigration02.3ddc025.html

Sunday, June 21, 2009

U.S. Citizen Children Sue Over Parents' Deportations

Posted By: Myo
Source: lawprofessors.typepad.com

More than 100 U.S.-born children sue President Barack Obama, asking a court to halt the deportations of their parents until Congress overhauls U.S. immigration laws. The children, who gathered Wednesday at the Miami nonprofit American Fraternity to draw attention to their cause, say their constitutional rights are being violated because they will likely have to leave the country if their parents are forced to go.

Click here for the full story.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Legal Battles Key to Immigration Reform reports HuffPo

Posted by: Michael Sinanian

The Huffington Post's "Weekly Immigration Wire" reports and links to several ongoing legal battles that are being contested over ICE's racial profiling and allegedly unconstitional practices of "law enforcement." The news roundup stresses how these legal battles will become increasingly important as presurre in Washington grows to pass immigration reform this year.

Article found here.

Immigration Reform: The Democrat's Crucial Test

Posted by: Michael Sinanian

As the calls for immigration reform are stepping up, the challenge to prove themselves is on the shoulders of the Democrats, reports Politico.com. Can they live up to their promises? As the article points out, "Hesitation could slow the momentum that immigration, faith, labor, and business groups have been building since 2007."

This was more of a news-reporting piece than one slanted by opinion, which I was frankly looking for as part of my coverage of left-wing politics' take on immigration. However, it's still insightful.

Article found here

RIfA: Couldn't Come Soon Enough

Posted by: Michael Sinanian

HuffPo reports on the Reform Immigration FOR America campaign being launched.

Article found here

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

What Court Ruling on Identity Theft Means to Migrants

In May, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of Ignacio Flores-Figueroa, a Mexican migrant worker from Illinois convicted of identity theft in 2007. Like most migrant workers, Flores-Figueroa did not know that the social security number in the false papers he was forced to buy in order to get work was a number that actually belonged to another person.

The crime of identity theft was established by an act of Congress in 1998, to deal with the growing problem of people stealing credit cards and personal information to empty bank accounts or get thousands of dollars in credit under someone else’s name. After 9/11/2001, authorities feared that false identities could also be used to facilitate acts of terrorism. This led to the Identity Theft Penalty Enhancement Act of 2004, which made it an aggravated felony punishable by an additional two-year minimum prison sentence.

In 2006 prosecutors realized they would use this anti-terrorist weapon to criminalize illegal immigrants. They won some cases, one of those was Flores-Figueroa, who appealed to the 8th Circuit Court and lost. More raids occurred and 300 workers were charged. The writer of the piece was involved in the cases. He acted as an interpreter in the proceedings and wrote an essay that prompted a congressional investigation.

The prosecutors tried to say that the people didn’t have to know they had real social security numbers, just the fact they were using them made them criminals. The court said they had to know they were using a real person’s identification in order to be charged. Most didn’t know what a social security number was, just that they had to have one to work. The 9-0 decision overturned three Appeal Courts and thousands of individual cases.

Posted by: Patricia

Source: La Prensa San Diego

Click here for full story


Monday, June 15, 2009

Colin Powell on Immigration Reform

Posted by: Myo
Source: Lawprofessors.typepad.com

Earlier this year Colin Powell gave a speech on immigrants and immigration reform at an event sponsored by the Carnegie Corporation. Here is an excerpt:

Some also argue that immigrants are a security threat. They assume that foreigners coming to America must remain foreign to America. That is not our history. Debate so often focuses on efforts to stem the flow of immigrants into our country or to establish conditions that immigrants must meet to become Americans that we may forget the powerful good we can do through our integration policies. An immigrant living in America can be isolated and mistreated, can live in fear of police raids and deportation. Isn’t it better to bring them out so they can openly navigate the path to becoming Americans and fulfill the expectations that brought them here in the first place? In an immigrant’s first embrace of this country, we often see ardent demonstrations of loyalty and patriotism—but only if we return that embrace. I have seen it thousands of times in my military career: the young men and women who come to this country as immigrants and volunteer to serve in our Armed Forces, the children of immigrants who volunteer to serve in our Armed Forces. You will find no better or more loyal soldiers than these young men and women who may already be citizens or who hope to do their service to become citizens.

Immigrants eventually become part of our social and economic fabric. But the policies with which we greet them are, in important ways, self-fulfilling. If we reach out, if we help, they will respond in kind. We can each embrace each other or we can embitter and disappoint immigrants by treating them as a security threat or as just a servant class. Or, we can truly provide for their integration in our society. We can consider their aspirations. Immigrants come to America because they expect life here to be more fulfilling, and our country has been strong in direct proportion to how we meet those expectations. And we must let immigrants know that we have expectations for them. They are expected to work hard, to learn the language, to learn our rules, to fit into our society, and as the generations that have come before them, become caring, considerate and law-abiding American citizens.

Click here for the entire speech.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Gay couples forced to flee US over immigration law

By MICHELLE ROBERTS
Associated Press Writer

The mayor of this West Texas sheep ranching town offered a stunning explanation when he suddenly resigned: He was in love with a man who was an illegal immigrant and had gone to Mexico.

They had to move, he said, because there was no legal way for them to remain together in the United States.

"It wasn't a decision that any U.S. citizen should have to make," former Mayor J.W. Lown said in an interview from Mexico. "I left a home. I left a ranch. I left a promising political career."

His local prominence and his run for the border on the day he was supposed to be sworn in for a fourth term caused jaws to drop, but it also became a high-profile example of the thousands of Americans who face a similar choice - separate or move abroad - because they can't secure green cards for their partners like heterosexual spouses can.

An estimated 36,000 Americans are in this situation, said U.S. Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-NY, citing information from the advocacy group Immigration Equality.

Bills have been introduced in Congress to treat same-sex partners like heterosexual spouses for the purposes of immigration but are likely to face a strong fight, both from gay marriage opponents and anti-immigration groups. The 1996 Defense of Marriage Act prevents immigration officials from recognizing gay marriages, even from states where they are now legal.

Proponents see the issue as a basic rights question, and Steve Ralls, a spokesman for Immigration Equality, said he believes the best chance for the legislation is as part of a larger immigration bill.

But other immigration advocates want to keep the issues separate, fearful of bogging down an already tough fight. Kevin Appleby, migration policy director for U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said the push for same-sex partners in immigration is about getting recognition in federal law for gay marriage - which he opposes.

"It's an unholy marriage of the immigration debate and the same-sex marriage debate," he said. "It's very combustible."

Lown's decision last month brought the issue to an unlikely place, a town of 90,000 where ranchers and roughnecks from the vast open lands come to do their banking and send their kids to the regional state college. The town's only other recent brush with national fame came last year when it housed the hundreds of children taken from a polygamist sect's ranch in nearby Eldorado.

Before his May 19 resignation, Lown (pronounced "lawn") was considered a political rising star. The 32-year-old Republican, first elected at age 26, won his fourth term with about 89 percent of the vote.

During his tenure, Lown transformed the $600-a-year, part-time job from a mostly ceremonial position to a hands-on office. He actively appeared at thousands of community functions and went to Washington to lobby for the West Texas town - spending his own money after a few residents complained about taxpayers footing the bill.

"That's devotion and dedication," Councilwoman Charlotte Farmer said. "He would have gone far in the political arena in the state of Texas and perhaps farther."

Lown's sexuality never really came up. Some people didn't know. Lown's godfather, Mario Castillo, said most who knew didn't care.

"San Angelo has a live-and-let-live attitude. As long as you don't go around waving your boxer shorts in Sunday school, people leave it alone," said Castillo, a longtime resident who is now a Washington lobbyist.

But Lown, who worked as a real estate agent, said his prominence meant his two-month-old relationship would be scrutinized and his 20-year-old partner might be subject to deportation.

"My heart was torn, and I had to make a decision," he said in a conference call with local reporters shortly after his resignation.

Lown has declined to identify his partner but said the man came across the Rio Grande as a teenager and attended high school and college in San Angelo. They went to Mexico - Lown won't say exactly where - so that his partner can apply for legal residency in the United States, generally a lengthy process for Mexicans without a U.S. citizen spouse, child or parent.

"I did not want to consciously violate the law," Lown said. "We want to make a life together and do it in the right way and follow the law."

Lown, whose mother was Mexican, holds dual citizenship allowing him to live legally in Mexico, he said.

San Angelo, meanwhile, will be without a mayor until the City Council decides whether to appoint someone or schedule a special election.

Lown hopes to eventually return here with his partner.

"I don't know how long this is going to take. It could take months. It could take years, but I'm prepared to wait as long as it takes," he said. "I hope I'll have some shred of my good name left when this is resolved."

posted by Sandra Robles

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

DHS eases deportation rules for widowed immigrants

Post by Maria Uribe

By SUZANNE GAMBOA
The Associated Press
Tuesday, June 9, 2009; 6:33 PM

WASHINGTON -- Surviving immigrant spouses of American citizens who die before they are married two years will get a break from deportation, the Homeland Security Department said Tuesday.

The department said it is suspending for two years enforcement of the so-called widow penalty that has triggered several lawsuits.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said in a news release the temporary suspension will allow immigrant widows and widowers and their children to stay in the country "that has become their home" until their legal status is resolved


Click Here

Monday, June 8, 2009

Judge: Immigrants' rights violated in Conn. raids

Post by Maria Uribe

By DAVE COLLINS
The Associated Press
Monday, June 8, 2009; 3:22 PM

HARTFORD, Conn. -- Federal agents violated the constitutional rights of four illegal immigrants in raids that critics say were retaliation for a New Haven program that provided ID cards to foreigners in the country illegally, a federal judge has ruled.


Click HERE

Birthright Citizenship

Annie Kim

Congressman Seeks to End Birthright Citizenship for Children of Illegal Aliens

True immigration reformers in the U.S. Congress have reintroduced legislation seeking to end birthright citizenship for children born to illegal alien parents in the United States.

 homepage feature

Click Here

The PROUD Act

Annie Kim

The PROUD Act

Submitted by admin on June 8, 2009 – 10:00 amComments (0)
The PROUD Act

It came to our attention last week that Representative Joe Baca was re-introducing a bill for immigrant high-school graduates called the PROUD Act or ‘People Resolved to Obtain an Understanding of Democracy Act’ (H.R. 2681).


Click Here

UFW Foundation, community leaders join national immigration reform effort

The UFW Foundation, sister organization of the United Farm Workers, community leaders and grassroots organizations in the San Joaquin Valley and the Salinas area will be joining the national campaign to Reform Immigration FOR America. The efforts seek to bring together public and civic, religious, labor and business groups across the nation to advocate for just and humane comprehensive reform legislation.

The UFW Foundation press conferences are part of a series of events, rallies and press conferences being held throughout the nation on June 1st. On Wednesday, June 3rd, UFW President Arturo S. Rodriguez and UFW Foundation Executive Director Diana Tellefson will be joining government officials and labor and religious leaders in Washington, D.C. for the official launching of the comprehensive reform campaign.

Click Here

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Reform Immigration for America campaign launch in L.A.

 (Prof. Montejano)

Will Coley <willcoley@gmail.com> [Interfaith_Immigration]

Date: Wed, 3 Jun 2009 10:11:39 -0700

Subject: LA Launch of Reform Immigration for America campaign

Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A9IVAOideOk

This week, hundreds of allied organizations launched the campaign to Reform Immigration FOR America in cities all across the country -- from Los Angeles to Maine, Miami to Seattle. Yesterday, a broad coalition of allies from labor, business, and community groups officially kicked off the national campaign in Washington, DC. Thursday, over 700 advocates are descending on Capitol Hill to tell Congress: "We cannot wait any longer. America needs to reform immigration now."

We can't afford to fly you out to DC to join them in person, but we can give you a 1-click way to be there on paper. Please take 30 seconds to send a (free) fax to your Senators, Representative, and Congressional leadership right now: http://www.reformimmigrationforamerica.org/

Then please forward this to friends and family. Our goal is to back up those 700 advocates on the Hill with 2,500 phone calls and 20,000 faxes.

Here's our thinking: President Obama has said reforming the immigration system is a priority for him. But it's going to take more than just having the President on our side to win. We need 279 votes to pass comprehensive immigration reform: 218 US Representatives + 60 Senators + the President's signature. So over the coming months, we're going to be asking you to help us flood Congress and the White House with faxes, calls, emails, and visits to say (each in our own way):

*Our economy and thousands of families are suffering under the burden of a broken system. The time has come for just and humane immigration reform. We cannot wait any longer.*

Together, we can make this happen.

Will Coley

AQUIFER MEDIA

http://aquifermedia.com

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Obama reverses Bush immigration lawyer rule

Posted by: Maria Uribe

WASHINGTON -- A rule limiting access to lawyers for immigrants facing deportation has been tossed out by the Obama administration.

click here