Archive for the ‘Immigration Reform’ Category

Immigration Reform 2015: NYC Mayor Advocates For Immigrants In 'State Of Our City' Speech

Mayor Bill de Blasioheralded New York City as a strong community of immigrantsin his annual address about the state of the nations most populous municipality Tuesday. He opened his address with a story about his grandmother immigrating from Italy more than 100 years ago and finding success as an entrepreneur and business owner. He also reached out to the city's many Hispanic residents in Spanish and championed economic reforms, including a proposed increase in the citys minimum wage and an expansion of affordable housing.

De Blasio said that growing economic inequality risks changing New York from an immigrant-friendly city of opportunity to a gated community.

For generations, New York has been a city that unleashed human potential -- a place offering opportunity for everyone, no matter how your lifes story began, opportunity for innovators and visionaries to write new chapters in our history, and for parents and grandparents to write brighter ones for the next generation, de Blasio said in the opening of his State of Our City speech.

In a city where more than 37 percent of residents are immigrants, de Blasio has made policies that help to integrate new arrivals and immigrants a central focus of his administration. He also publicly supported Obama administration efforts to push federal immigration reforms that stalled in Congress.

Last month, the mayor launched one of the nations most ambitious municipal identification card programs, IDNYC, offering the card to city residents regardless of their immigration status. On Tuesday, de Blasio said more than 180,000 people had booked appointments to obtain the ID card, which offers access to basic services and cultural institutions.

Critics of IDNYC blasted the program and others like it, dismissing it as a reward for illegal immigration. But de Blasio and other proponents contend the program can improve safety in immigrant communities, providing valid IDfor residents interactions with the NYPD and security personnel in city buildings. Lets be clear: Relegating any New Yorker to life in the shadows is not who we are as a city, de Blasio said in his speech.

De Blasio has joined other Democratic mayors in the U.S. to oppose a lawsuit filed in Texas by Republican governors who claim President Barack Obamas executive actions on immigration are illegal because the GOP-controlled Congress did not approve the measures. In November, Obama offered to defer deportation actions and grant work permits to an estimated 5 million immigrants who are currently living in the U.S. without legal permission. The president had previously deferred deportation for immigrants who were brought to the country illegally as children.

De Blasio also outlined plans to battle economic inequality in the city of more than 8 million residents by seeking an expansion of affordable housing citywide and raising the minimum wage. The mayor said a proposal by state lawmakers -- New Yorks minimum wage will increase to $9 in 2016 -- wasnt enough to impact city residents. Thats why we will fight to raise New York Citys minimum wage to more than $13 per hour next year, de Blasio said, adding that wages would be indexed to bring a projected $15 per hour in four years. Nothing does more to address income equality than actually raising peoples incomes, de Blasio said in his speech.

De Blasio did not directly address his seemingly fractured relationship with the citys police forceafter months of protests over the police killings of unarmed black men in New York and Missouri. The mayor had only praise for the courageous men and women in uniform, whom he said helped reduce the rates of murder, robbery and burglary in the city to an all-time low.

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Immigration Reform 2015: NYC Mayor Advocates For Immigrants In 'State Of Our City' Speech

Immigration Reform 2015: GOP Plan To Defund Obama Immigrant Actions Could Hurt Department Of Homeland Security, Border …

U.S. Senate Democrats blocked Tuesday a $39.7 billion funding bill for the Department of Homeland Security. The 51-48 vote killed House-passed proposals to undo President Barack Obama's executive actions on immigration, Politico reported. There are just three weeks remaining for Obama and congressional Republicans to hammer out a compromise that funds the agency in charge of protecting U.S. residents from terrorist attacks and regulating immigration, among other functions. DHS only recently emerged as a wedge issue to between the White House and the GOP, whose members want to defund parts of the agency that would carry out Obamas plan to defer deportation for several million undocumented immigrants.

The department will run out of money after Feb. 27, Reuters reported, but the agency would continue its national security functions. Obama, in a cabinet meeting on Tuesday, warned that inaction would endanger the paychecks of front-line federal workers in the agency formed as a response to the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks in New York and Washington.

Homeland Security is made up of 22 different federal departments and agencies that were streamlined to control immigration at the countrys ports and borders and to defend against and respond to terrorist attacks. The agency also manages federal response to man-made and natural disasters. In 2002, after Congress passed the Homeland Security Act, the department became its own, cabinet-level entity. It officially opened its doors on March 1, 2003, according to the DHS website, and soon absorbed the functions of the immigration and naturalization services. Those services were divided into two subagencies, the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency is also under DHS. Famously criticized for its response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005, FEMA absorbed the functions of four other disaster response offices. In 2005, DHS began the first of a few rounds of reorganization to further streamline its functions. Today, the DHS boasts a more than 240,000 person work force and had a budget of $39.2 billion for the fiscal year 2014. The president requested $38.2 billion for 2015.

The U.S. House of Representatives last month passed a separate Homeland Security bill that funds everything except the executive actions on immigration. House Speaker John Boehner, a Republican from Ohio, urged the Republican-controlled Senate to pass the measure ahead of Tuesday's vote.

But Democrats stood with Obama who, in his cabinet meeting on Tuesday, stressed the potential risks of sending thousands of national security personnel to work without pay. I talked about this yesterday [and] I want to re-emphasize it today: The Department of Homeland Security contains numerous agencies that, every single day, are keeping the American people safe, Obama said at the top of the meeting, according to a White House pool report. [The employees] need certainty in order to do their jobs. The notion that we would risk the effectiveness of the department that is charged with preventing terrorism and patrolling our borders, making sure the American people are safe makes absolutely no sense.

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Immigration Reform 2015: GOP Plan To Defund Obama Immigrant Actions Could Hurt Department Of Homeland Security, Border ...

Immigration Reform and Homeland Security: Statement of LIUNA General President Terry O'Sullivan

WASHINGTON, Feb. 3, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- We are proud that Democrats and Republicans in the U.S. Senate rejected the attempt to hold the Department of Homeland Security hostage in order to reverse President Obama's executive order on immigration. Protecting immigrants from exploitation and uncalled-for deportation honors the spirit and principle of our nation and can help raise living standards for all workers.

Congress should focus on the country's needs. That means funding the Department of Homeland Security and passing true comprehensive immigration reform rather than using either in a repulsive political game.

As an organization founded by immigrants, LIUNA has long been a fierce advocate for comprehensive immigration reform which secures our borders, provides a path to citizenship, levels the playing field for honest employers and allows everyone in America immigrants and non-immigrants to work free from harassment, intimidation or exploitation.

The half-million members of LIUNA the Laborers' International Union of North America are on the forefront of the construction industry, a powerhouse of workers who are proud to build America.

Logo- http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20110428/DC91600LOGO

SOURCE Laborers' International Union of North America

RELATED LINKS http://www.liuna.org

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Immigration Reform and Homeland Security: Statement of LIUNA General President Terry O'Sullivan

Immigration Reform 2015: Law Against Citizenship Scams In New York State Goes Into Effect

Scammers in one the largest immigrant hubs in the U.S. will now face stiffer penalties for defrauding people who are seeking legal assistance with immigration matters. New York states Immigration Assistance Service Enforcement Act, which went into effect on Monday, establishes new protections and rights for immigrants who use the services of a notario pblico, which are generally individuals or businesses that falsely represent themselves as qualified legal advisers for new arrivals and other citizenship issues. The law makes it a felony to defraud people seeking assistance of more than $1,000.

The effort by immigration reform advocates is designed to protect immigrants from becoming victims of fraud. President Barack Obama in 2012 began taking executive action on immigration, deferring deportation actions against undocumented immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children and later offering work permits to millions of other people who came into the country illegally, which caused an uptick in reported frauds against immigrants.

Notarios, which traditionally take advantage of cultural differences, are not permitted to give legal advice nor are they licensed to represent cases that are pending in immigration courts or the Department of Labor. They also may not threaten to report undocumented immigrants to authorities over complaints about bad service. In Latin American countries, notario pblico is an attorney or trusted member of the community who is authorized to give legal advice.

All 50 U.S. states and several U.S. territories have some form of protection against this costly fraud, according to the Department of Homeland Security. Last year, the Federal Trade Commissionwon a $616,000 judgment againsta Maryland couple over deceptive immigration services. The agency said it registered 891 complaints of immigration services fraud in 2013.

New Yorks law is unique in that it is the only one to establish permanentlythe state Office of New Americans, which is dedicated to promoting and enhancing the welfare of immigrant communities, according to the New York Immigration Coalition. The Immigration Assistance Service EnforcementAct, for which state Sen. Rubn Daz and Assemblyman Marcos Crespo advocated, was signed into law by Gov. Andrew Cuomo last August.

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Immigration Reform 2015: Law Against Citizenship Scams In New York State Goes Into Effect

Will Common Sense Rule on Immigration Reform? – Video


Will Common Sense Rule on Immigration Reform?
"The proposed amendment would prioritize deportation for illegals convicted of sex abuse and domestic violence. It also would promote the hiring of U.S. citi...

By: bethepeopletv

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Will Common Sense Rule on Immigration Reform? - Video