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Immigrant Rights
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So you think you
know about immigration [7-5-06]
Each Fourth of July, our nation makes a big deal
of immigrants who are becoming naturalized citizens.
This year, the Minneapolis Star Tribune
observed the occasion with a little test of our knowledge of the facts about
immigration – both "then" (in the good ol’ days) and now (when immigration
is being defined by some as the greatest of threats to our nation).
They offer seven questions and ask you to
choose the best answer. And the right answers are sometimes surprising – and
enlightening.
As a sample, here’s one question – and we’ll
even give you the answer if you promise to try the other six questions
without peeking.
The question:
Until 1924, how many immigrants could
come to the United States each year?
A) As many as could cram in
B) 10,000 per permitted nation
C) Numbers differed by country
Answer:
A. The 1924 National Origins Act for
the first time imposed broad immigration quotas.
OK – now go try
the rest >> |
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Immigration "reform" and racism [5-23-06]
Molly Ivins agrees with Presbyterian minister
Eun-hyey Park, who wrote
here 3 weeks ago that it’s really all about race.
"By all means, reform immigration with this deep obeisance
to the Republican right-wing nut faction and their open contempt for
'foreigners,'" writes Ivins. "But do not pretend for one minute that it is
not a craven political bow to racism." Her
article >> |
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Urgent
Alert from the Presbyterian Washington Office
SUPPORT FAIR WAGES AND A PATH TO RESIDENCY
FOR FARMWORKERS!
[5-17-06]
The Washington, DC based Rural Farm Coalition has prepared the following
Urgent Action Alert and sample letter regarding the plight of farm workers
in the current immigration debate. The Senate is currently debating an
immigration bill and many, many, many amendments are being offered even as
this message is being typed. We will not write about all of them , but have
chosen a few key ones that severely challenge key concerns expressed in
General Assembly policy. The Chambliss amendment would limit the protections
in AgJOBS legislation. It is urgent that you call both your Senators and
urge them to reject any amendments that would limit the protections in
AgJOBS. You will find talking points in a document by Farmworker Justice
Fund at the end of a letter below, that is being signed by many
organizations and will go out on Friday You can use the letter and other
material in you communications with your Senators. You can reach the Capitol
Switchboard at 202-224-3121 or go to
www.senate.gov and search for your member by name, zip code or state. As
always, the PresbyAction Center can be found on the web page of the
Presbyterian Washington Office.
Click here and enter your zip code in the GO box to the right. If
you have already contacted your Senators this week, please feel free to
forward this information to someone who may not have.
We further urge you to study the immigration bills now pending, and to urge
your Senators to support a final package that is closest to the
Kennedy-McCain bill that was approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The key point here is not just a guest worker plan, but a guest worker plan
that allows for residency or a path to citizenship.
This email is about the farm worker concerns. In a separate email, I will
send information about the immigrant detention issue. If negative amendments
are passed that bring the Senate immigration bill too close to the House
bill 4437 passed in December, then advocates are beginning to think that no
bill is better then a severely compromised bill with harmful consequences.
==================================================================
SUPPORT FAIR WAGES AND A PATH TO RESIDENCY FOR FARMWORKERS!
Action Alert: SIGN ON LETTER TO SUPPORT AgJOBS May 16, 2006
ISSUE: The Senate has now re-opened the immigration debate that faltered in
April. The current bill under consideration is known as the Hagel-Martinez
Compromise, S.2611. We have a number of concerns about this bill; however,
as farmers, farmworkers and members of rural communities, we are especially
troubled by the possibility of eroding protections and opportunities for
farmworkers as they are now contained in the bill. Senator Saxby Chambliss
(R-Ga) will propose two amendments in the upcoming week that could do just
that.
The following letter describes the two amendments, one which would eliminate
the path to citizenship for farmworkers currently in the United States, and
the other which would eliminate wage protections for farmerworkers in the
H-2A program, and urges Senators to vote against them. More information
regarding these amendments can be found at the end of this alert.
The Senate is expected to finish this legislation before Memorial Day
weekend, so the time to act is now. We are preparing a sign on letter for
delivery to the Senate early next week, and are urging you also to call both
of your Senators to request their support for Ag Jobs.
At the very end of this action alert, we have also attached a brief overview
and analysis of the overall immigration packages that have been considered
or passed in Congress. The bill passed by the House contains no AgJobs
provisions and has other very detrimental features. We urge you to ask your
Senators to support just immigration policies that recognize the critical
contributions of immigrants to our workforce and society.
+++ TEXT OF THE SIGN-ON LETTER TO THE SENATE
May 16, 2006
Dear Senator,
As organizations of small farmers and farm workers concerned about the
future of our rural communities, we the undersigned urge your support of the
"AgJOBS" legislation found in Sections 611 - 619 of S.2611, the Hagel-Martinez
Compromise on immigration currently being debated in the Senate.
The "AgJOBS" reforms are bipartisan, comprehensive and widely supported by
both farmworker groups and agricultural businesses. We ask that they be
retained in any final bill the Senate passes. Senator Chambliss of Georgia
plans to submit amendments that would limit or eliminate two of the most
important reforms contained in the AgJOBS provisions. First, he may seek to
eliminate the earned adjustment provision, which allows agricultural workers
to apply for residency by committing to five years of future agricultural
work and the payment of a fine. While some parties opposed to the bill claim
that it represents an amnesty, it is in fact a program through which workers
legally and ethically earn their citizenship through years of productive
work in the agricultural labor force.
Second, Senator Chambliss may attempt to abolish the adverse effect wage
rate. This would diminish wage rates currently in place under the H-2A
program and redefine the "prevailing wage," effectively opening the door for
employers to pay their workers well below the federal minimum wage. We are
concerned that removing this protection will drive down wages for both
foreign born and American agricultural workers.
We support the reforms contained in the current version of AgJOBS. We
request that you protect these long-awaited and carefully negotiated
provisions by voting against amendments by Senator Chambliss or others that
do not receive clear support of the Ag Jobs bill sponsors, Senators Larry
Craig and Dianne Feinstein.
As you vote on the larger immigration package, we further urge you to work
for a package that is closest to the McCain- Kennedy package as passed by
the Judiciary Committee.
Sincerely,
Rural Coalition/Coalición Rural, Washington, DC
+++
BACKGROUND INFORMATION AND TALKING POINTS FROM FARMWORKER JUSTICE FUND
AgJOBS Action Alert!
Please support the AgJOBS Farmworker Immigration Compromise
What is AgJOBS?
* The Agricultural Job Opportunities, Benefits and Security Act of 2006 (";AgJOBS";)
represents a major compromise between farmworker advocates (led by the
United Farm Workers) and major agricultural employers to address the
agricultural immigration crisis.
* The primary sponsors of AgJOBS are Senators Larry Craig (R.-Idaho), Edward
Kennedy (D.-Mass.), and Dianne Feinstein (D.-Cal) in the Senate and Reps.
Chris Cannon (R.-Utah) and Howard Berman (D.-Cal.) in the House of
Representatives.
* AgJOBS contains two main parts: (1) an ";earned adjustment"; program
enabling many undocumented farmworkers and H-2A guestworkers to obtain a
"blue card"; temporary immigration status with the possibility of becoming
permanent residents of the U.S. through continued work in agriculture; and
(2) revisions to the existing H-2A temporary foreign agricultural work
program.
What is the status of AgJOBS?
* AgJOBS is included in the Senate compromise immigration bill, the
Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2006, S. 2611, sponsored by Senators
Specter, Hagel, Martinez, Kennedy, McCain, and others. It is likely that the
Senate will debate immigration again beginning next week. But there are
still challenges ahead in winning passage of AgJOBS in the Senate and then
by the full Congress.
* Sen. Chambliss (R.-Ga.) who opposes any earned legalization program, has
filed many amendments to AgJOBS that would make the AgJOBS legislation
unworkable for farmworkers and employers and make it fundamentally unfair in
many ways.
What can you do to help migrant farmworkers?
* Please contact your Senators and ask them to support AgJOBS and oppose the
Chambliss amendments. You can use the talking points below.
Contact information for your Senators can be found at http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/se
nators_cfm.cfm.
Talking Points
* Please support the AgJOBS farmworker immigration compromise.
* Please oppose the Chambliss amendments, and oppose any other amendments
not supported by the AgJOBS primary sponsors (Craig, Kennedy and Feinstein).
* We are particularly concerned about Sen. Chambliss's proposal to undermine
the wage protections for U.S. farmworkers under the H-2A guestworker
program. His so-called ";prevailing wage"; amendment would abolish the
longstanding H-2A adverse effect wage rate and install a new, skewed formula
for determining the ";prevailing"; wage rate. The AgJOBS compromise includes
a decrease in the H-2A wage rates and a three-year freeze while two studies
are performed so that recommendations to Congress can be made.
* Sen. Chambliss would eliminate the opportunity of farmworkers to earn
permanent resident status, and instead would create an unworkable "report to
deport" program. His proposal offers no prospect for stabilizing the work
force with legal-resident workers.
* He also would unfairly terminate legal-aid eligibility for H-2A
agricultural guestworkers.
* These amendments are similar to the amendment Chambliss offered last April
that lost by 77-21. * Thank you for your help.
More information about AgJOBS and other immigration bills affecting
farmworkers can be found under Legislative News.
RURAL COALITION OVERVIEW OF PENDING IMMIGRATION BILLS
HR 4437 - The Border Protection, Antiterrorism, and Illegal Immigration
Control Act of 2005, or the "Sensenbrenner Bill"
This bill passed the House of Representatives on December 16, 2005 by a vote
of 239 to 182. It is misguided both in its approach to border control and to
dealing with the reality of undocumented immigrants currently in the U.S.
Among other problems with the bill, it would:
• Make the presence of undocumented persons in the U.S. a felony punishable
not only by deportation, but potentially by jail time.
• Criminalize humanitarian assistance to the undocumented, putting churches,
social service providers, and "good Samaritans" at risk under a broadened
definition of "human smuggling."
• Authorize the building of a wall across the entire U.S.-Mexico border.
S 1033 -- Secure America and Orderly Immigration Act, or the
"Kennedy-McCain Bill," which became known as the "Judiciary Committee Bill"
This bill was brought up in and approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee
in March 2005. A few of the main components include:
• Creates a new temporary visa to allow immigrants currently in the U.S. to
work legally for up to six years and then apply for legal residency.
• Spouses and unmarried children under the age of 21 would also be eligible
for adjustment.
• Increases funding for Border Control personnel and technology.
• Includes AgJOBS amendment, which provides a path to citizenship for
temporary agricultural workers.
S 2611 -- Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2006, or the "Hagel-Martinez
Compromise"
This is the legislation that was last being considered in early April before
it collapsed because the Republicans and Democrats could not agree on the
number of amendments that would be allowed or the make-up of the committee
that would reconcile this bill with the House immigration bill (HR 4437) in
the conference process.
As the Senate is supposed to take this up again in May, they are likely to
use this compromise as the starting point. The "Hagel-Martinez Compromise"
offers fewer protections than the "Kennedy-McCain Bill" by limiting the path
to citizenship and creating more classes for immigrants already in the U.S.:
• Immigrants in the country for more than 5 years would be eligible for
legal residency.
• Immigrants in the country for more than 2 years, but less than 5 years
would be required to leave the country, apply for a visa (with priority over
future immigrants) and return through a land port of entry.
• Immigrants in the country for less than 2 years would be subject to
deportation.
• Increases funding for Border Control personnel and technology
• Includes AgJOBS amendment, which provides a path to citizenship for
temporary agricultural workers.
Analysis: None of the legislative proposals being considered meets the
principles of the Rural Coalition/Coalición Rural for a fair and just
immigration policy. The Kennedy-McCain version as passed in the Senate
Judiciary Committee comes closest.
The Senate has not yet completed action, and whatever is approved there must
be reconciled with the punitive and unjust provisions of the House bill. It
is therefore of critical importance to support the strongest alternatives
that have any chance of being considered.
While widely considered to be the version "on the table" at present, the
Hagel-Martinez approach is even weaker and creates classes of immigrants.
Moreover, it provides even less room for productive compromise with the
House.
As Kennedy-McCain remains the version passed in committee, we advocate that
both Senators and Representatives be encouraged to support Kennedy-McCain.
************************************************************
Please forward this message to others you think might be interested.
#################################################################
Rev. Elenora Giddings Ivory Director, Washington Office
Presbyterian Church (USA)
202-543-1126
202-543-7755 (fax)
100 Maryland Avenue, N.E., Suite 410
Washington, DC 20002
eivory@ctr.pcusa.org
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Immigration reform needs your voice!
[5-16-06] As the debate rumbles on in the U.S.
Senate over immigration reform, there are reports that the phone and e-mail
messages going to Senators are running 20 to 1 again reform.
If you haven’t sent a message yet to your senators, this
week is the time to do it. If you have, this is the time to do it
again, since the bills have been changing as the days pass.
For the latest information,
go to
the Presbyterian Washington Office web site. You should find help
there on the elements in the bill that are most worth defending. |
| GA has spoken often
to affirm the dignity and rights of immigrants
[5-16-06] As the national
debate continues over immigration and immigrants' right, this may well
become a matter of discussion in the 217th General Assembly. Since at
least 1984, Presbyterian General Assemblies have spoken out often to affirm
the rights of immigrants, and the need for justice in the way they are
treated. Here is a small sampling of some of those statements,
especially a longer statement from the 211th General Assembly (1999).
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| Moderator Rick Ufford-Chase
comments on the immigration debate, out of his18 years of experience on the
border See
his blog, posted today, May 3, 2006 -- and we're presenting his comments
in full right here. [5-3-06]
Friends,
With all of the energy around the immigration debate at the moment, many
have asked for my opinion. I thought I would post a response I wrote to
someone this morning. This is a very cursory reflection,
If you are Presbyterian, and interested in becoming a positive part of the
immigration conversation in our church, please send an email to Dana at
dages@ctr.pcusa.org to ask for an invitation to participate
in the Immigration network in the PC(USA).
So here are some quick thoughts that are based on my border experience over
the last eighteen years:
First, the unspoken conversation underlying our broken immigration policy is
our flawed trade policy. Until we create trade policy that makes a
legitimate attempt to build up the infrastructure, local economies, and job
opportunities that provide a genuine future in Latin American countries with
whom we would like to trade, we will continue to see a border and an
immigration crisis here in the U.S.
Current trade policy is designed to promote economic growth for
multinational corporations by dropping trade tariffs, but the result is a
policy that sucks most of the economic resources out of the Latin American
country because the driving motivator for the corporations is always going
to be access to cheap labor and cheap natural resources. The problem, of
course, is that the money leaves the communities, and although the workers
often do get a steady paycheck, none of the profits remain to be re-invested
in the community itself. (Note that this is no different than the arguments
taking place in many of our communities about "big-box stores" that wipe out
local businesses.)
Though no one has really asked me, it seem to me that the elegant solution
would be to insist that if we sign a trade agreement with any country, we
will concurrently sign legislation allowing the free and open movement of
workers back and forth between our country and theirs. (Think about the way
it currently works between states in the U.S.) I would note that this is not
only good theology, it's also Capitalism 101. The ability of the worker to
move for a better job is supposed to create a pressure that will drive up
wages, and a "rising tide will lift all boats." That's not what's going on
with trade policy we're developing in our hemisphere, where we allow capital
and products to cross borders, but not workers.
Some folks respond that then "everyone would come here." That’s probably
true, which suggests that we would be much more intentional about designing
trade legislation designed to create sustainable communities from which the
immigrants are originating, offering them a legitimate choice to stay where
they are because they can actually support their families without migrating
to do so.
Second, we could solve many of our immigration problems very quickly with a
good, readily accessible visa program for any Mexican or Central American
who shows up at our border with a passport and a clean bill of health. As
far as I'm concerned, I'd even be willing to see a hefty fee of $500 to
$1,000 to cover administrative costs, since migrants are typically
mortgaging everything they own or entering into indentured servitude to pay
several times that to smugglers in order to get across the border right now.
Once those folks are fully documented, it means that they are paying taxes.
This is how we solve a serious problem of lack of infrastructure that exists
in many communities that have been overwhelmed by undocumented migrants. If
we want hospitals, schools, community security and transportation systems
that create good quality of life in our communities, the answer is to use
the tax base to put those systems in place, the same we our country has been
doing that for decades.
Further, the church community has continually insisted, and will continue to
insist, that any documentation program must provide the ability to reunite
families, allow workers the ability to move independently to look for work
(so that they don’t become a captive, "slave" labor force for an employer
who can threaten them with deportation), and the ability to work toward
citizenship if they are solid members of the community.
Finally, until these macro problems are solved, churches must find out where
migrants are and support them. To be without documents in our country today
is to be at extreme risk. It will take great courage and serious commitment
for our churches to stand against the "anti-immigrant" lunacy that currently
is infecting our country and insist that we will live the gospel values of
welcoming the stranger and caring for the dispossessed.
I hope that you, like I, have been moved by the sight of several million
people who have been demonstrating peacefully over the past few months to
let us know that they are here, they are doing critical work this country
depends on, and they only desire to be full and productive members of our
community.
Peace to you,
Rick
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Resources on the moral dimensions of immigration
[4-14-06]
Some visitors to this site have asked for help in finding material that
deals with immigration issues from a faith perspective.
 | We have already mentioned the
Presbyterian immigration policy study guide,
which was developed by The Advisory
Committee on Social Witness Policy (ACSWP), based on a Resolution Calling
for a Comprehensive Legalization Program for Immigrants Living and Working
in the United States, which was approved by the 216th General Assembly
(2004).
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 | Also a very good interfaith statement was issued last
October "in support of comprehensive immigration reform." |
It begins:
We, the undersigned faith-based leaders and
organizations, join together to call upon President Bush and our elected
officials in Congress to enact comprehensive immigration reform
legislation that establishes a safe and humane immigration system
consistent with our values. Our diverse faith traditions teach us to
welcome our brothers and sisters with love and compassion.
The Hebrew Bible tells us: "The strangers who sojourn
with you shall be to you as the natives among you, and you shall love
them as yourself; for you were strangers in the land of Egypt (Leviticus
19:33-34)." In the New Testament, Jesus tells us to welcome the stranger
(cf. Matthew 25:35), for "what you do to the least of my brethren, you
do unto me (Matthew 25:40)." The Qur'an tells us that we should "serve
God…and do good to…orphans, those in need, neighbors who are near,
neighbors who are strangers, the companion by your side, the wayfarer
that you meet, [and those who have nothing] (4:36)."
We call for immigration reform because each day in our
congregations, service programs, health-care facilities, and schools we
witness the human consequences of an outmoded system. We see and hear
the suffering of immigrant families who have lost loved ones to death in
the desert or immigrants themselves who have experienced exploitation in
the workplace or abuse at the hands of unscrupulous smugglers and
others. In our view, changes to the U.S. legal immigration system would
help put an end to this suffering, which offends the dignity of all
human beings. The
whole document >>
 | Transformation of Churches
and Society Through Encounter with New Neighbors
In 1999, the 211th General Assembly approved a
statement which "Reaffirm[s] the guiding theological and ethical
principles contained in the historical review of Presbyterian policy on
immigration and refugee issues, and commit[s] to rediscover its identity
as a church of the stranger."
From that starting point the statement affirms the many gifts and
insights that we gain from the presence of immigrants and refugees, and
urges both church and government bodies to deal with these people out of a
true respect for their dignity and rights as human beings.
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Transformation of Churches and Society Through
Encounter with New Neighbors
The 211th General Assembly (1999):
a. Reaffirm[s] the guiding theological and ethical
principles contained in the historical review of Presbyterian policy on
immigration and refugee issues, and commit to rediscover its identity as a
church of the stranger.
(1) Christians are obligated by the loving will of God to
seek to ensure that the basic needs of persons for food, clothes, shelter
and safety are met (Matt. 25-35-40).
(2) Christians believe in the intrinsic worth of each
human as a person made in the image of God.
(3) The Christian confession of Jesus Christ as Lord
transforms "strangers" into neighbors who are welcomed into our communities.
(4) Churches are called to ministry with refugees, asylum
seekers, and immigrants, and to public witness on their behalf.
(5) Christians have the responsibility to challenge and to
shape government policy regarding refugees, asylum seekers, and immigrants.
(6) Love of neighbor requires Christians to seek justice
for refugees, asylum seekers, and immigrants.
(7) Faithfulness to Christ means Christians always live in
tension with national values and policies.
(8) Christians may affirm certain values in national and
international life as consistent with their theological vision of human
community.
b. Reaffirm[s] the guiding policy principles contained in
the historical review of Presbyterian policy on immigration and refugee
issues and to utilize them to rediscover its identity as a church of the
stranger.
(1) Christians should engage in pastoral, compassionate,
educational, and prophetic ministries with refugees, asylum seekers, and
immigrants.
(2) The provision of sanctuary for asylum seekers may be
an appropriate moral response for churches even though the Untied States
government regards this witness as illegal.
(3) Churches should vigorously advocate the church's right
to religious freedom in their ministries with refugees, asylum seekers, and
immigrants.
(4) Refugees, asylum seekers, and immigrants should be
treated humanely and justly in government policies and in our communities.
(5) The United States should respect the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and adhere to international laws and accords
that seek to implement standards of universal human rights.
(6) Christians should seek the elimination of
discrimination and racism from government policies and community responses.
(7) The United States government should ensure that the
constitutional rights of refugees, asylum seekers, and immigrants to due
process of law are protected.
(8) Sovereign nations should exercise their authority to
regulate immigration with a presumption toward
generosity rather than restrictiveness.
(9) The United States should open jobs to neighbors with a
strong and continuing historical connection who need and want to work so
long as there are jobs available and the poor already residing in the United
States are not further disadvantaged.
(10) Restrictions on immigration
should be enforced humanely.
(11) The United States government should make the causes
of human displacement a major priority in United States foreign policy.
c. Direct[s] the General Assembly Council, through its
Ministries Divisions, to coordinate the various initiatives for ministry
with immigrants, refugees, and asylum seekers by:
(1) Urging sessions and presbyteries to develop new
approaches to ministry with new neighbors and to share those models that are
successful in order to be mentors and models for others; and encouraging
presbyteries and synods as the locus of support to congregations and
individuals called into caring ministry with immigrants, refugees, and
asylum seekers.
(3) Encouraging Presbyterians to express pastoral concerns
and prayers for those whose[sic] service[sic] in the
Immigration and Naturalization Service, acknowledging that they often find
themselves faced with difficult, morally ambiguous, and even morally
indefensible situations in the enforcement of U.S.
immigration policy.
(4) Identifying and/or developing resources for pastoral
care with asylum seekers and immigrants who are in detention.
d. Reaffirm[s] the 209th General Assembly (1997)
Resolution on "Welfare and Poverty" policy on the Personal Responsibility
and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, urge[s] presbyteries and
congregations to respond to the plight of refugees and immigrants during the
next year when public assistance ends, and to advocate publicly on their
behalf so that their basic needs will be met.
e. Reaffirm[s] the consistent witness of General
Assemblies on behalf of due process in legal proceedings and urge[s]
Presbyterians, presbyteries, and congregations to engage in advocacy efforts
to ensure that foreigners in the United States have the same legal
protections that citizens enjoy, including the right to legal counsel.
f. Advocate[s] for the repeal of those sections of the
1996 immigration law that provide for the expedited
removal of asylum seekers and immigrants without a full hearing, including
the right of appeals, urging presbyteries and sessions to do similar
advocacy. Until these sections are repealed, the
Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) of the United States government
should cooperate with efforts to monitor independently the way "expedited
removal" is applied.
g. Advocate[s] for the repeal of those sections of the
1996 immigration law that removes review of that law
and its administration from the jurisdiction of
immigration judges and the federal courts, urging presbyteries and sessions
to similar advocacy.
h. Oppose[s] the routine use of detention as an
enforcement tool in addressing common immigration
violations, noting the particular hardship this puts on women and children,
urging presbyteries and sessions to similar advocacy.
i. Advocate[s] for use of the credible fear standard for
releasing asylum seekers from detention, and assuring a more speedy
adjudication to reduce unreasonably lengthy stays in detention, urging
presbyteries and sessions to do similar advocacy. The
Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) should ensure asylum seekers
are not held in local jails, nor detained with local criminals, and that
they are provided humane conditions including adequate and appropriate food,
personal treatment, medical care, prompt access to legal help, family, and
friends.
j. Urge[s] that numerical limits used by the United States
on allowing adjudicated asylum seekers adjust to a legal permanent residence
(LPR) status be lifted, urging presbyteries and sessions to do similar
advocacy.
k. Urge[s] restoration of a more generous admission of
refugees, giving particular attention to the annual report of the United
Nations High Commission for Refugees, and ensuring that those refugees
identified and screened as being in urgent need of resettlement (rescue) be
a priority for United States admissions, urging presbyteries and sessions to
do similar advocacy.
l. Advocate[s] for the repeal of sections of the 1996
immigration law that require state and local
governments, and publicly funded institutions and programs (such as
hospitals, battered women's shelters, WIC, church feeding programs) to
report undocumented persons to the INS, urging presbyteries and sessions to
do similar advocacy. The 211th General Assembly (1999) further calls on
Christians who are under such reporting requirements to weigh in their
conscience the claims of this requirement against the biblical injunction to
shelter and welcome the stranger.
m. Advocate[s] for review of the sections of the 1996
immigration law that defined misdemeanors as felonies
for purposes of deportation and removed the possibility of an immigration
judge granting a discretionary waiver from deportation based on a person's
whole case, urging presbyteries and sessions to do similar advocacy. The
211th General Assembly (1999) affirms that Christian belief demands that we
make an allowance for atonement and redemption of those who have made a
mistake but are working to overcome it.
n. Express[es] concern and encourage study of the
militarization of our nation's borders for the purpose of dealing with
immigration.
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Urgent
Alert from the Washington Office of the Presbyterian Church (USA)
PresbyAction Network: Immigration Alert
Immigration: Politics Trumps Policy
[4-11-06]
Take
Action!
The following update is from the National
Immigration Forum.
Further demonstrations continue around
the country in the wake of Senate not voting last week. April 10th Rallies
have been called for in various locations. Go to
http://www.april10.org to see what
continuing events may be happening in your locality. This site will list
future events as well. Your Members of Congress are at home on recess for
two weeks. Visit them in their district offices.
================================================================
Impasse: Politics Again Trumps Policy
[April 7, 2006] Earlier today, a tentative
agreement on comprehensive immigration reform legislation in the Senate fell
apart, and the senate failed to take action before adjourning for a two-week
recess.
Yesterday, Senate leaders of both parties,
and Senators who have played a key role in shepherding comprehensive reform
through the Committee process, came together around a compromise initiated
by Senators Martinez (R-FL) and Hagel (R-NE). The compromise policy proposal
would have preserved much of the Judiciary Committee bill. With respect to
legalization, the compromise proposal would have led to approximately 10
million undocumented immigrants getting permanent residence within 6 to 8
years. Those who have been here for five years or more, would be offered a
direct and multi-step process to permanent residence. Persons who had been
in the U.S. prior to January 7, 2004, but less than five years, would have
to "touch base" outside the country, but will be able to come back in
immediately and get on track for permanent residence within eight years.
(Though they have to "touch base" outside of the country, paperwork will be
done in the U.S.) Those here since January 7, 2004, would not be eligible
for legalization, but would not be barred from the temporary worker program,
with its own path to eventual citizenship for those who want to stay.
Details of the process for pushing the
agreement forward were the sticking point. While restrictionist Senators
wanted to offer a series of amendments to weaken or gut the agreement, there
was a sufficient bi-partisan coalition of Senators to defend the agreement
against the amendments of obstructionists. For varying reasons, it was the
leadership of both parties, and procedures in the Senate which make it easy
for a handful of Senators to prevent the Senate from getting things done,
that has halted progress towards comprehensive immigration reform for now.
What's Next?
Congress is out for two weeks. The issue is
not going away. Monday, there will be demonstrations in Washington and
across the country. The public is demanding that Congress take action. While
Senators are home for this two-week recess, you should continue to contact
them and let them know it is important for the Senate to get back to the
business of reforming our immigration laws.
For information on activities planned for
April 10, see: http://www.april10.org
It is not clear what the next step in the
Senate will be at this point. But let's review for a moment where we've come
in the last few weeks. Three weeks ago, the Senate Judiciary Committee was
slowly slogging through dozens of amendments to further restrict the due
process rights of immigrants on an underlying bill which already included
harshly punitive enforcement provisions and nothing better than permanent
underclass status for undocumented immigrants. Senator Frist, in control of
the Senate schedule, was threatening to bring his own bill to the Senate
floor that had nothing but enforcement for the undocumented. Two weeks ago,
there was a 12 - 5 bipartisan vote in the Judiciary Committee to legalize
millions of undocumented immigrants in this country. Yesterday, a
bi-partisan coalition came together behind a compromise that would have
legalized 10 million undocumented immigrants, and increased visas for
family- and employment-based immigration. We are making progress, and we
must lift up the civil rights and due process issues ("Title II") to push
for needed changes. We have a terrific coalition.
The next step may well depend on what happens
in the next two weeks around the country.
Need help sending e-mail to your Members of
Congress? Go to our e-mail message service, at
http://capwiz.com/pcusa/dbq/officials , insert your Zip Code (click
"Go"), then click on the button under their name to e-mail them.
Published by the Stewardship of
Public Life (SPL) advocacy program of the Washington Office,
Presbyterian Church (USA), 100 Maryland Avenue NE, Washington, D.C.
20002, (202) 543-1126,
www.pcusa.org/washington.
For more information about the content of
this article, please e-mail Elenora Giddings Ivory at
eivory@ctr.pcusa.org. If you
are not a member of SPL but would like to be,
please click here.
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An index of
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