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National & State Immigration Issues Nora Skelly Acting Director for Advocacy.

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Presentation on theme: "National & State Immigration Issues Nora Skelly Acting Director for Advocacy."— Presentation transcript:

1 National & State Immigration Issues Nora Skelly Acting Director for Advocacy

2 LIRS Advocacy Work Engage Congress and the Administration – Educate staff on issues – Develop and maintain relationships – Urge them to take targeted actions Work with NGOs, Lutheran church partners, and constituents – Coalitions – Stand for Welcome campaign – Support targeted actions – Advocacy gatherings

3 Broken Immigration System  11.5 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S  In 2011, 396,906 migrants were deported, the largest number in history  Estimated 100,000 parents of U.S. citizen children  Countless families separated  5,100 children in foster care  Billions of dollars spent on immigration enforcement and detention  Immigrants waiting for a family visa wait years, even decades to reunite  Passage of misguided state laws

4 National issues - Congress House of Representatives – Republican majority – Trying to advance bills that add more enforcement measures (mandatory employer verification, increased detention, etc.) and restrict legal immigration to the United States Senate – Democrat majority – Passage of modest bills, seek to stall objectionable bills passed by the House 2012 elections likely to stall progress in remainder of year

5 National issues - Congress Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act SSI assistance for refugees Religious worker visas Violence Against Women Act Child tax credit Harmful detention proposals

6 Violence Against Women Act  Senate version: o Increases visas available for victims of serious crimes who collaborate w/ law enforcement  House version: o Deny vulnerable immigrants many protections originally created by VAWA o Deter victims from cooperating with law enforcement o Hold victims of abuse to a higher standard than other applicants for immigration benefits  Two versions of VAWA have been passed and now need to be reconciled before the bill can be passed into law, but no plans yet announced to do so

7 Child Tax Credit  Additional Child Tax Credit = families with children to receive approx $1,800 for taxpayers earning $21,240/year  Individualized Tax Identification Number users = People without Social Security numbers, such as undocumented immigrants  Proposals revoking ITIN eligibility for ACTC: - way to offset costs of other proposals -Independent legislation by Sens. Vitter (R-LA) and Rubio (R-FL)  Legislation has the potential to harm 1.3 million children

8 Harmful Enforcement Proposals Keep Our Communities Safe Act – Remove judicial review and prolong detention – Harmful impacts for asylum seekers, stateless individuals and other vulnerable migrants Spending for Department of Homeland Security – Increase in detention spending – Increased collaboration between federal and state law enforcement – Prohibiting funds for family unity waiver or prosecutorial discretion

9 National issues - Administration President Obama – Supports comprehensive immigration reform and the DREAM Act and has criticized Arizona and Alabama state laws – Has devoted limited political capital to build public support and advance legislation Department of Homeland Security – Deports ~400,000 immigrants per year – Announced immigration detention reforms, though little progress – Continues to expand Secure Communities nationwide – Announced a review process to allow the government to suspend the deportations of certain immigrants – Announced policy to protect DREAMers from deportation Department of Justice – Suing Alabama, Arizona, South Carolina and Utah – Cooperating with deportation review

10 National issues - Administration  Prosecutorial Discretion -Case-by-case review  Stateside processing for family unity waiver  Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals - “Live” on August 15

11 Prosecutorial Discretion  Prosecutorial discretion = the long-established authority of law enforcement to decide what charges to bring and how to pursue each case.  In August 2011 DHS announced a new process to utilize prosecutorial discretion in a nationwide review of 300,000 cases of migrants currently in deportation proceedings and close cases of migrants who are a “low enforcement priority:”  strong ties to the United States  have made significant contributions  have not committed any serious crimes.  Administrative closure = Migrants are allowed to remain in the United States. They are not be provided legal status, a work permit, or a guarantee that their case will not be reopened at a later date.

12 Prosecutorial Discretion in Practice  As of May 29, ICE attorneys had found 20,648 cases eligible for administrative closure, or approximately 7.2% of those reviewed.  Offers of administrative closure were accepted in 4,363 cases and rejected in 3,998 cases, for an acceptance rate of 52.2%.  In 3,000 cases, these migrants may be eligible for a more permanent form of relief

13 Family Unity Waiver Waiver for undocumented immigrants to reunify with U.S. citizen parent/spouse in cases of extreme hardship Current process means leaving the country and risk short- or long-term separation Proposed change: – Begin process within United States – Shorten separation – Increase transparency and likelihood people will come forward Administration has announced a proposed change, solicited public comment, and could make change operational in a few months

14 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals  Announcement of relief from deportation and work authorization for DREAMers on June 15  Guidelines announced for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) on August 3 o Be under the age of 31 as of June 15, 2012; o Have come to the United States before reaching the age of 16; o Be currently enrolled in or completed high school; o Not have been convicted of certain crimes  Application process began August 15

15 State Issues – Arizona v. United States  The Department of Justice challenged the constitutionality of SB 1070.  In June 2012, U.S. Supreme Court invalidated three out of four of the law’s challenged provisions: o Making it a crime for immigrants without work permits to seek employment o Making it a crime for immigrants to fail to carry registration documents o Authorizing police to arrest without a warrant any immigrant they believe has committed a deportable offense  Court suggested an openness to considering the remaining provision in the future: o “Papers please” - allows police to verify the immigration status of anyone they detain if there is “reasonable suspicion” that the person is without proper documentation

16 State Issues - Legislation Harmful SB 1070 “copycat” legislation – AL, GA, SC, UT, IN – Many being litigated or amended Tuition equity or state “DREAM Act” – CA, CT, MD, RI CA Trust Act -Pushing back on Secure Communities Photo credit: Wingchi Poon

17 State Responses to Deferred Action  Eligibility for state benefits  AZ, NE – no state benefits or driver’s licenses  TX – no state benefits  CA – driver’s licenses will be issued  Some reiteration of existing law, others new policy

18 What about comprehensive immigration reform?

19 History of Comprehensive Immigration Reform 2005/2006: House and Senate pass different CIR bills, but unable to agree on final bill 2007/2008: Senate rejects CIR and then the DREAM Act on the Senate floor 2009/2010: Bipartisan work on Senate CIR proposal begins but negotiations break down 2009/2010: House of Representatives passes DREAM Act, but it falls 5 votes short in Senate

20 Future of Comprehensive Immigration Reform Priority elements for LIRS: o Earned pathway to citizenship o Protection for families and speedy family reunification o Humane enforcement and alternatives to detention o Protections for migrant and U.S. citizen workers o Protection for refugees, children and vulnerable migrants Congress and the Administration need to hear from YOU that immigration reform is a TOP priority and that YOU EXPECT them to support fair and humane policies

21 Questions? Nora Skelly Acting Director for Advocacy nskelly@lirs.org (202) 626-7934


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