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Our struggle is to bring social, political, and economic justice to our nation. This is an effort of the Chicano/Mexican American Digital History Project. https://sites.google.com/site/chicanodigital/

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Biden Backtracks- Already !

 

Reversal of Trump immigration policies will ‘take time,’ Biden team says

Maria Sacchetti

Top advisers to President-elect Joe Biden said Tuesday they will not immediately roll back asylum restrictions at the Mexican border and other Trump immigration policies, tamping down expectations for the kind of swift reversals Biden promised on the campaign trail.

Speaking to reporters on a conference call, several members of the Biden transition team said the incoming administration would “need time” to undo “damage” to the U.S. immigration system and border enforcement policies that have severely limited the ability of asylum seekers to qualify for humanitarian protection.

The transition officials echoed statements made by Susan E. Rice, Biden’s incoming domestic policy adviser, and Jake Sullivan, his pick for national security adviser, in an exclusive interview published Monday with the Spanish wire service EFE urging patience with their immigration agenda.

Rice told EFE that Biden will use executive authority to implement his immigration agenda, but her cautious statements appeared to reflect the incoming administration’s worries that easing up too quickly on Trump’s enforcement system could trigger a new migration surge at the border.

“Migrants and asylum seekers absolutely should not believe those in the region peddling the idea that the border will suddenly be fully open to process everyone on Day 1. It will not,” Rice said, according to a translation of the interview transcript.

Immigrant advocacy groups and others who deplore Trump’s policies have pushed Biden to embrace wholesale changes to a U.S. enforcement model designed to deter illegal migration through a system of detention and deportation.

Biden’s policies on immigration

Rice told EFE the new administration would offer a “transformative vision for addressing migration in our region” and would work to build “a fair, humane, and orderly immigration system.”

“We will be able to take some steps to change policies right away,” Rice said. “Others will take time to put in place, and the situation at the border will not transform overnight due in large part to the damage done over the last four years. But we are committed to addressing it in full.”

Rice said Biden will not immediately end the practice of rapidly “expelling” migrants to Mexico, measures implemented by the Trump administration in March, citing public health concerns. The measures allow U.S. agents to wave off normal asylum procedures and promptly return most border-crossers to Mexico, an arrangement Homeland Security officials say is needed to prevent further spread of the coronavirus inside border stations and detention centers.

Rice told EFE “processing capacity at the border is not like a light that you can just switch on and off.”

Said Rice: “Our priority is to reopen asylum processing at the border consistent with the capacity to do so safely and to protect public health, especially in the context of covid-19. This effort will begin immediately, but it will take months to develop the capacity that we will need to reopen fully.”

Similarly, Sullivan told EFE that the administration would not immediately end the Migration Protection Protocols that Biden had promised to terminate on his first day in office. Under those Trump measures, asylum seekers are sent back to Mexico to wait outside U.S. territory — some in squalid tent camps — while their claims are processed in U.S. courts.

Biden vows to ‘restore and defend’ legal immigration, reversing Trump administration visa policies

“MPP has been a disaster from the start and has led to a humanitarian crisis in northern Mexico,” Sullivan said. “But putting the new policy into practice will take time.”

Rice and Sullivan told EFE that Biden will hold to his commitment to immediately introduce legislation creating a path to citizenship for 11 million people in the United States illegally. Such a proposal will face long odds in a divided Congress.

“We need legislative changes to make enduring repairs to our immigration system, and the president-elect will share his vision with Congress,” Rice said. “He is committed to working collaboratively with members of Congress to achieve the needed reform that has long eluded the country.”

Officials from Biden’s transition team said Tuesday the president-elect will suspend deportations from the U.S. interior while it “sorts out” new policies for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Rice and Sullivan told EFE the Biden administration would redouble efforts to stem emigration from Central America by creating jobs, battling corruption and improving security. Biden “will work to promptly undo” Trump’s deals with Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador allowing U.S. authorities to transfer asylum seekers to those countries, Sullivan said.

“As currently written, the outgoing administration’s so-called ‘asylum cooperative agreements’ deny the right to apply for asylum in the United States to desperate asylum seekers rather than helping create alternative pathways to protection,” he said.

The Obama administration also prioritized controlling the border and swiftly deported tens of thousands of migrants seeking work in the United States. As vice president, Biden traveled to Central America as part of a push to foster investment in migrants’ home countries so that they would not feel compelled to leave home.

But dramatically more people are arriving at the border to seek asylum — meaning they feel their lives are at risk in their homelands — posing a new challenge for Biden, because advocates say many of their fears are real.

Trump has alleged that migrants are seeking asylum because it is easier to gain entry into the United States, and his administration has implemented different programs to hold them at bay. Thousands who attempted to cross at legal ports of entry were sent to Mexico and added to waiting lists, a process called “metering” that Biden transition team officials have promised to end.

More than 65,000 others crossed the border and were sent to Mexico under Trump’s Migrant Protection Protocols; of these, about 23,000 remain in shelters and camps along the border, according to a new report by Human Rights First, a nonprofit organization that has been tracking conditions on the border.

Officials also have expelled at least 8,800 unaccompanied minors and thousands of adults, many to the nations they fled, under the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention order barring entry during the pandemic, the report said.

Kennji Kizuka, a senior researcher and policy analyst Human Rights First, said migrants in Mexico are struggling to make a living and to protect themselves in high-crime border cities. Human Rights First has tracked at least 1,300 acts of violence against migrants in Mexico, including murder.

“We want them to adopt all the safety measures that are needed,” he said of the Biden administration. “At the same time, there needs to be some sense of urgency. There are a lot of refugees who are in danger in Mexico and who can be processed safely.”

He said many were headed to the United States in part because they have family here who can shelter them.

“It can’t all happen on Day 1,” he said. “But it also shouldn’t wait until June.”

In their statements Monday and Tuesday, Biden officials did not address the incoming administration’s plans for the $15 billion border wall project, but the president-elect said during the campaign he would not build “another foot” of the barrier.


Posted by Duane Campbell at 2:13 PM No comments:
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Labels: back tracks, Biden, immigration

Monday, December 21, 2020

The Reality Check: WILL THE SUPREME COURT OVERRULE FARMWORKER UNION R...

The Reality Check: WILL THE SUPREME COURT OVERRULE FARMWORKER UNION R...: WILL THE SUPREME COURT OVERRULE FARMWORKER UNION RIGHTS? By David Bacon Capital & Main, November 20, 2020 https://capitalandmain.com/wil...
Posted by Duane Campbell at 7:32 PM No comments:
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America’s Farmworkers—Now ‘Essential,’ but Denied the Just-Enacted Benefits

America’s Farmworkers—Now ‘Essential,’ but Denied the Just-Enacted Benefits: The undocumented workers who pick the nation’s food are excluded from the CARES Act.
Posted by Duane Campbell at 9:46 AM No comments:
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Labels: CARES Act, Farm workers, immigrants

Wednesday, December 09, 2020

Guides to the DACA Decision


DACA

On December 4, 2020 a federal judge ordered the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to fully restore the original DACA program.


What does this mean for me?

USCIS must start accepting initial DACA requests from first-time applicants.

Effective December 4, 2020, USCIS must begin to process DACA first-time requests. This includes all people who were eligible for the program but were not able to apply before the September 2017 termination, and those who applied after the June 2020 Supreme Court decision but had their request rejected.

A person can be eligible for DACA if they:
Were born after June 15, 1981;
Came to the United States before their 16th birthday;
Were physically present in the U.S. on June 15, 2012 and when applying for DACA;
Had no lawful status on June 15, 2012;
Have continuously resided in the U.S. since June 15, 2007 until the present;
Meet certain educational requirement or were honorably discharged from the U.S. Armed Forces; and
Have not been convicted of certain crimes

Individuals who are interested in applying for the program should consult a legal service provider to see how they can prepare and file a request. To find a legal service provider in your area, visit: https://bit.ly/ianimmhelp.

USCIS must process applications according to the 2012 DACA Program requirements.
All applicants who are eligible to renew their DACA can continue to submit their DACA renewal applications. This includes people who currently have DACA, whose DACA has expired, and those whose DACA was terminated, but are still eligible.

USICS will automatically extend all DACA grants issued for one year to two years.
People who applied and had their applications processed after the publication of the July 28, 2020 memo were issued DACA protections valid for one year. Now that the Court invalidated this memo, these DACA protections will be automatically extended to two years. Recipients should receive notice from USCIS indicating this extension of their case.

USCIS will process Advance Parole request for DACA recipients who can demonstrate they need to travel due to education, employment, or humanitarian reasons.
DACA recipients can apply for an international travel permit called “Advance Parole” if they can show they need to travel for “humanitarian, education, or employment” purposes. It is important that people consult a legal service provider before they apply for and travel on advance parole to discuss any risks, including COVID-19 restrictions.




Deferred Action for Childhood Arrival (DACA/DAPA) | ILRC This is ILRC's statement. and next steps.


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Labels: DACA, Renewal

Monday, December 07, 2020

LULAC Wants Food, Agricultural And Meat Packing Workers To Get Vaccine First


Nation’s Oldest and Largest Latino Civil Rights Organization Says Kansas Governor is Right in Prioritizing Essential Workers

Washington, DC - Domingo Garcia, LULAC National President on Saturday issued the following statement:

“LULAC supports Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly who said meatpacking plant workers and grocery store employees are essential workers putting them in line for coronavirus vaccines. Tens of thousands of essential workers got up before dawn today and went back as they do every day, into the agricultural fields and meatpacking plants across our country to provide the food that feeds us. LULAC is calling for prioritization of distribution of the COVID-19 vaccine to food and agricultural workers alongside our nation’s doctors and nurses plus first responders. Food and agricultural workers are heroes. They have been on the front lines of the pandemic, ensuring American’s have access to safe, nutritious, affordable food, and they should be at the front of the line for the vaccine as well.

Latinos are the largest minority community working in the agricultural industry and meat processing industry. Latinos are farmers and ranchers raising cattle and poultry delivered to dinner tables of millions of families each and every day. Latinos labor on the agricultural fields planting and harvesting fruits and vegetables. Latinos work the food lines in meat processing plants to feed our families. Latinos stock the grocery shelves across the country. Latinos are preparing the meals at restaurants and delivering food to millions of families during this pandemic. Americans depend on the hard work and contributions of Latinos in the food industry.

Latinos have also been disproportionately affected by COVID-19 due to worsening historical inequities. The hospitalization rate related to COVID-19 is 217.2 per 100,000, according to the latest CDC data. Hospitalization rates for Latinos are 4.2 times the rate among whites, and COVID-19 deaths among Latinos are at an all-time high of 32.4% when weighted for population distribution. In fact, during a record-breaking week of reported COVID-19 cases nationwide, Latinos fared the worst. The Latino community continues to experience the harshest outcomes, including economic impact, social upheaval, and, most significantly, mortality rates.

The agricultural and meatpacking workers are on the frontline delivering vital services and deserve to be protected as soon as possible to keep our nation safe and nourished. LULAC is the first community-based Latino organization that has gone into the meatpacking plants to see firsthand the conditions in some of the most challenging workplaces in our country. We have met face-to-face with the workers, met with the unions, and talked with CEO’s of the largest meat companies in the United States discussing the steps they are taking daily to make their facilities safer. The virus is an elusive, fast-moving threat facing the agricultural and meatpacking industry; owners, operators and workers alike. LULAC is committed to keep fighting for more PPE, safer line speeds, free onsite testing, paid time off for workers who become sick and paid leave for workers who are at risk during this pandemic. Equally important now is ensuring that essential workers are part of the first wave of individuals who are able to access the vaccine. As COVID-19 spreads, the number of cases at many of these agricultural and meat processing plants will increase. We must act quickly and decisively if we are to stop the rate of COVID-19 infections and save lives.

Our priority from day one has been and will continue to be the workers. This is our mission because we know essential workers are not only keeping so many of us nourished, but also safe at home and keeping the American economy running. Nobody can survive without food and it’s important we understand that a disruption to the food supply has a grave impact on all of us.”

# # #

About LULAC

The League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) is the nation’s largest and oldest civil rights volunteer-based organization that empowers Hispanic Americans and builds strong Latino communities. Headquartered in Washington, DC, with 1,000 councils around the United States and Puerto Rico, LULAC’s programs, services and advocacy address the most important issues for Latinos, meeting critical needs of today and the future. For more information, visit www.LULAC.org. 

Posted by Duane Campbell at 2:06 PM No comments:
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Labels: Essential workers, farmworkers, Meat processing

Sunday, December 06, 2020

Current U.S. Immigration Policy

 


Posted by Duane Campbell at 9:26 PM No comments:
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Labels: children, Children in cages

Friday, December 04, 2020

Judge Orders U.S. Government to Reinstate Data - Immediately

Judge Orders Government to Fully Reinstate DACA Program

Up to 300,000 additional undocumented immigrants could be allowed to apply for protection from deportation under a new court ruling. President Trump had sought to cancel the program.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/04/us/daca-reinstated.html

A federal judge on Friday ordered the Trump administration to fully restore an Obama-era program designed to shield young, undocumented immigrants from deportation, dealing what could be a final blow to President Trump’s long-fought effort to end the protections.

The program, known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, was created by President Barack Obama in 2012. Over the years, it has protected more than 800,000 individuals, known as “dreamers,” who met a series of strict requirements for eligibility.

But those protections have been under legal and political siege from Republicans for years, leaving the immigrants who were enrolled in DACA uncertain whether the threat of deportation from the United States could quickly return with a single court order or presidential memorandum.

Judge Nicholas G. Garaufis of the U.S. District Court in Brooklyn directed the administration on Friday to allow newly eligible immigrants to file new applications for protection under the program, reversing a memorandum issued in the summer by Chad Wolf, the acting secretary of Homeland Security, which restricted the program to people who were already enrolled. As many as 300,000 new applicants could now be eligible, according to the lawyers who pushed for the reinstatement.

The memo from the Department of Homeland Security also limited benefits under the program, including permits to work, to one year, but the judge ordered the government to restore them to a full two years. Judge Garaufis, who was appointed by President Bill Clinton, also said the government must find a way to contact all immigrants who are eligible for the program to inform them of the change.

The judge said the government must announce the changes to the program on its website by Monday.

Lawyers who had challenged the Trump administration in the case celebrated the decision, saying that amid a pandemic and global economic recession, it granted some stability to a vulnerable group.

“This is a really big day for DACA recipients and immigrant young people,” said Karen Tumlin, director of the Justice Action Center, who litigated the class-action case. “It’s a day that many of them have been waiting for for over three years.” She said it could open the door for hundreds of thousands of immigrant youths “who have been unfairly denied their chance” under the DACA program.

The program still faces other challenges, including a case in federal court in Texas, where Republican attorneys general have asked a judge to declare it unlawful. And Mr. Trump’s administration could appeal the ruling by Judge Garaufis in the days ahead.

Immigration advocates said they hoped the administration would not continue its legal fight to end the program given the arrival of a new, Democratic administration in less than two months.

President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. has vowed to restore the DACA program when he takes office, but a legislative solution that would permanently allow the dreamers to live and work legally in the United States remains elusive, leaving their fates to the shifting political winds in Washington.

  

Posted by Duane Campbell at 8:58 PM No comments:
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Labels: court order, DACA
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