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Archive for the ‘Immigration’ Category

The farce of a task force, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Advisory Council Task Force, that attempted to tour the United States to instill confidence in a process that didn’t really exist, released a final report last week that included recommended tweaks to the mass deportation program.

The report contained no bombshell revelations. It confirmed what many advocates and activists have been saying since the program was expanded under President Obama (let us not forget that back then many advocates also said the program was ok since it targeted “criminals”). In fact many of the findings echo those in a report released last month by a coalition of organizations : its adverse impact on community policing; inaccurate and incomplete information about the program provided by ICE to state and local officials; and the lack of clarity on whether the program is in fact legally mandated.

Five of the task force’s 19 members, including all three who represented labor unions, and the former police chief of Sacramento Arturo Venegas, resigned, citing objections to the recommendations contained in the committee’s final report.

While the resignations are noteworthy, they are as much of a show as the task force itself. The resignations, happening after task force tour meetings were met with protest after protest, carry no weight, no consequence. A far stronger and more principled stance would have been to not participate in this toothless process from jump. Additionally, while across the board, the non-profit responses have been in support of the resignations and non-surprise at the findings and recommendations of the task force, with the additional demand of shutting down the program completely, there is still a centering on how S-Comm comes between police and community and/or negatively impacts “community policing”. While #altopolimigra is the most favored hashtag of the moment, I have yet to see a defining of “community policing” or any real acknowledgement of how even without enforcement programs, local police tend to terrorize immigrant people of color communities.

Sources : NY Immigration Coalition Press Release, National Immigration Law Center Press Release

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This past weekend, when I received an email announcing that the National Council of la Raza (NCLR) was declaring the economic boycott of Arizona over, I admit that my first reaction was confusion.

I was confused because I didn’t remember the boycott solely being “owned” by any one organization. I was confused because I thought that the boycott (which I have been following and respecting as have my children) was supposed to remain in effect until the anti-immigrant law SB1070 was repealed. Did I misunderstand?

So I went back.

Various organizations and localities called for boycotts. No one can own an act of resistance.

The demand of the boycott was that SB1070 be repealed.

That hasn’t happened.

According to reports in the media, NCLR is cancelling the boycott because they feel that they have successfully discouraged other states from enacting similar laws (never mind not so successfully discouraging the president from his enforcement/deportation party). NCLR and other orgs are pointing the millions of dollars lost because of the boycott including the cancellation of conferences and conventions in the state. Additionally, The Arizona Republic says Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon’s office sent NCLR letters last month asking it to end the boycotts and work toward immigration reform. Based on the official press release announcing the calling off of the boycott, it’s all about the money honey. Both the Arizona Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and the Greater Phoenix Convention and Visitors Bureau are quoted in the official release, talking about the importance of “getting back to business”.

I know I am not the only one confused by this decision. Certainly the boycott in and of itself is controversial. There is debate as to the effectiveness of such an action, just like there is debate as to the effectiveness of civil disobedience. What both boycotts and cd’s share in common is that on their own, they are useless. On a small scale, people not buying a Stone Cold Creamery ice cream cone or blocking a highway are meaningless unless they are connected in a real way to work on the ground for a long time. The work of protest is not supposed to be easy. That is why it is called struggle. And to clarify, work on the ground does not just mean funded policy promoting as is currently happening with across the board in the immigrant rights advocacy world. The immigrant “movement” at the moment has been completely co-opted by non-profit orgs and their funders. There is no direction while on our blocks deportations rise.

And then we wonder why we are unable to find a Latino “leader”.
And then we wonder why Latinos are criticized for being unable to create sustained actions.

I’ve gone from confusion to cynical anger at the state of “movement building”.

Does NCLR’s backing off the boycott mean their national convention will be in Phoenix next year?

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Ten undocumented youth were arrested on Tuesday during an act of civil disobedience at Central Piedmont Community College in Charlotte, North Carolina. According to DREAM Activist , the action was a protest against a number of anti-immigrant policies in the state including discriminatory policies towards undocumented students at community colleges, and the criminalization of the undocumented community as a result of programs like 287g and Secure Communities, which is active in 100% of counties in North Carolina. The site was also chosen because and to hold the Democratic party accountable to their inaction and often supportive hand in perpetuating this current attack on the immigrant community. Charlotte was also targeted because it is the site of the Democratic National Convention next year, and the current Democrat led administration has so far deported over a million immigrants and have expanded enforcement policies. It also cannot be forgotten that when the DREAM Act came before Congress last year, Democratic North Carolina Senator Kay Hagan voted against the bill.

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It’s been about two weeks since the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the White House made an announcement that is being (purposely) interpreted as a victory and something to be thankful for by many in the immigrant advocacy movement(s).

DHS announced the eventual (time frame please) creation of a panel that will allegedly review the approximately 300,000 currently active deportation cases. The panel will separate those cases into two categories : high priority and low priority (no word on how that determination will be made). DHS will then allegedly suspend the deportations of the low priority cases, focusing instead on the same “dangerous” and “bad” immigrants allegedly targeted by Secure Communities. But don’t worry, those who have their cases suspended will not get green cards or even work permits. They will be able to live in the same shadow they always have, just without a deportation process.

Yay?

On a call that I was on two nights ago sponsored by Reform Immigration for America (RI4A), Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), featuring Congressman Luis Gutierrez (perhaps you were reading my angry tweets), “Victory” was the buzzword. While it was made clear that there was no process to apply for and that people should not put themselves in deportation in order to have their case reviewed (a call I saw some making in the days immediately following the announcement), the DHS press release (because really that is all it is until panel is formed and procedures are established) was hailed as an answer to “our” demands.

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A spokesmodel is a spokesperson whose physical appearance contributes to brand equity.
When I think of Latina spokesmodels, I think of the women of Sabado Gigante : leggy, tetona, culona bottle blonde white women smiling holding up the next product we just have to have. They are stereotypical examples of what Latinidad should be and in general mass audiences comsume that image, internalize that identity, as much as whatever dishwashing soap the jingle is asking us to purchase.

Cecilia Muñoz, the Director of Intergovernmental Affairs at the White House, plays an equivalent role well in Latino politics. She has proven to be the Latina spokesmodel for Obama’s immigration policy, prioritizing deportations over any executive action that could be taken and attempting to sell this destructive product to us in English and Spanish.

In response to the coordinated protests across the country happening against the expansion of the Secure Communities deportation policy, the White House officially responded through a post, with Muñoz’s name, on the official White House Blog.

The title of the post, In the Debate Over Immigration and Deportations, the Facts Matter, implies that the protesters, organizations and community members are lying about the impact of Secure Communities. In other words : potential Latino voters – the White House doesn’t believe you.

Their is a call growing for Cecilia Muñoz to resign from her position. Many feel that she is incapable of stepping back and actually listening to criticisms. Some may say she is simply doing her job and that Latinos should be happy to have someone in the White House. We are told to wait until November of 2012 and let the election sort it out, not to personalize the issue. That this S-Comm is part of a larger immigration policy strategy and that Muñoz is a genius and has done much in terms of immigration.
I counter that asking how many deportations past the one million mark will we be at in 2012. Is this level of deception acceptable because it is coming from the Democratic Party and not the GOP? I am pretty certain that those whose loved ones are being deported take the issue very personally.

This is not about quitate tu pa’ponerme yo. This is not about careerism. Certainly this is about a policy that is destroying families under the cover of taking care of the “bad guys”. Cecilia Muñoz can keep selling with a smile, a service that is harmful to our communities, or she can keep it real and resign.

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When the Secure Communities Task Force took their sham of a “community hearing” to Arlington, Virginia earlier this week, they heard testimony for, but mostly against the deportation policy that has contributed to a million deportations under the Obama administration.

It should be noted, that in the video above Maria Bolanos, whom we have written about, is peaking directly to the assistant director of Secure Communities , Marc Rapp.

Like in meetings past, the action included a call for task force members to resign and a walk out. After the walk out, the meeting did continue.

Meanwhile, in Los Angeles, the site of the first S-Comm task force meeting, there was a protest at the federal detention facility, that ended in the arrests of five people, included DREAMers. All of those arrested have since been released.

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Today at noon, PST, five undocumented youth will come out in front of ICE with a simple demand; a speedy end to the failed Secure Communities program.

From the official press release announcing the event:

As Undocumented students we are tired of Obama and his lies and we need to call him out,” said Ruben Barrera who’s brother was detained a day after Obama announced his “policy change” for a broken headlight. Ruben’s brother, Isaac was held for 2 days and was issued an ICE hold after ICE interrogated him numerous times. “It was torture, I was cold, they insulted me and they threatened to come after my family, if it wasn’t for community organizations that helped me get out I could have been deported” said Isaac Barrera.

Barrera will be one of people coming out as undocumented today in front of the Federal Building, 300 N. Los Angeles.

If you are not local to the event but would like to follow what is happening, there will be a live-stream of the event here.

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Apologies for taking a few days off from the site to spend time with visiting familia. One thing is for sure, that in spite of little earthquakes, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) demonstrates that the passage of time doesn’t change a thing.

After holding such successful taskforce meetings in Los Angeles and Chicago, DHS is holding another meeting tonight at George Mason Law School at 3351 Fairfax Drive in Arlington, Virginia to hear testimony on the Secure Communities deportation policy.

Like with the other meetings, local organizations are holding press conferences and actions to show their appreciation. Today at 5:15 p.m. ET, followed by March at 5:30 p.m, there will be a press Conference at St. Charles Borromeo Catholic Church, 3304 Washington Blvd., Arlington, VA.

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As the Secure Communities task force circus continues it’s national tour, assuring people that they are listening as they deport people, the protests continue and are escalating.

Yesterday in Chicago, following the trend started at the Los Angeles S-Comm task force meeting, there was a massive walk out. Following the walk out, while the “meeting” continued inside with some giving testimony as to the local impact of the deportation policy, 6 undocumented youth were arrested in acts of civil disobedience. All of the undocumented youth who were part of the action have been released, along with 3 supporters who were also detained by police.

Court ordered documents released earlier this week include acknowledgement by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) attorneys that they would have to “rewrite” memos on whether the program is mandatory for states and localities and revealed schisms between the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) on the right of states and localities to opt out of the program.

Today ICE will be back in court today arguing it should be able to keep secret documents relating to the agency’s purported legal basis to impose S-Comm on unwilling states like Massachusetts, Illinois and New York.

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Mala’s Note: Originally I was going to write this as one post but as I have been reading the report and analyzing, it really is too long for one post. So I am going to break up my analysis into two (or three) parts.

Yesterday, the National Day Laborer Organizing Network and a National Community Advisory Commission made public a report condemning the Secure Communities deportation program and recommending its termination. The report, titled “RESTORING COMMUNITY: A National Community Advisory Report on ICE’s Failed “Secure Communities” Program,” makes excellent recommendations even if none of them are really new. However, the context – that is the analysis as to why those recommendations should happen are far from change making and in fact do a grave injustice to where the immigrant rights movement and police accountability movement intersect.

Let’s focus on the positive : In Part I – the Introduction and Recommendations, the report makes clear that there is no fixing S-Comm. It needs to be stopped along with other programs that merge immigration with policing. The complete recommendations are:

Recommendations:

1. The Secure Communities program should be ended.

2. The current Department of Homeland Security Office of
Inspector General audit of Secure Communities should
be completed and the Department of Justice Office of
Inspector General should begin an investigation into the
FBI’s role in Secure Communities.

3. Criticism of Secure Communities should be applied to
inform changes to other ICE ACCESS programs, and the
entanglement of local criminal law enforcement and
federal civil immigration functions should be stopped and
reversed.

4. States and localities should not be compelled to
participate in immigration enforcement programs,
including the forwarding of fingerprints and other
biometric information to the Department of Homeland
Security

Part II : Problems with Police – ICE Entanglement, is where the report started to raise first my eyebrows then my temper. Instead of centering immigrants, the report chooses to centers police and policing. Relying primarily on the “expertise” of law enforcement officials from across the country, the primary problem with S-Comm is it’s interference with public safety within immigrant communities. Having lived in immigrant communities for most of my life, I can tell you that there is no better expert on the safety of our communities than law enforcement.

That was sarcasm.

It’s interesting that the report chooses from jump to allow safety to be defined by police, who historically have been charged with keeping immigrant communities in our place – in other words keeping others safe from us. The report seems to function on the assumption that there is in place a good, working relationship based on trust between immigrant communities and law enforcement.

Ron Hampton, the President Black Law Enforcement in America, and someone who was very involved in the massive national anti-police brutality struggles of the 1990′s, is quoted as saying:

“Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) ‘Secure Communities’
program is incompatible with community policing.”

What the quote and the rest of this portion of the report fail to acknowledge is that the concept of “community policing” has been co-opted by police forces across the country into a meaningless public relations/marketing label. The report goes as far as to claim that community policing is to be credited to the massive drop in crime over the last decade. Hmm and here I thought it was stepped up surveillance, stop and frisks based on racial profiling and the use of the broken windows theory. “Community Policing” as it is used now relies on the “good vs. bad” citizen narrative – relying on your neighbors to rat other neighbors out – rather than the community determining what safety means for them and how to work towards that. S-Comm uses the same deceptive narrative, with the White House saying that it is program targeting the “bad” or “criminal” immigrants – so that the “good” ones don’t need to concern themselves. For example, Michael Hennessey, Sheriff of San Francisco is quoted as saying that the issue with S-Comm is that it casts too wide a net. With a certain amount of pride, Sheriff Hennessey says that he reports felons to ICE all the time.
You cannot effectively fight a program by adopting it’s language. I think that quote about the the ineffectiveness of using the master’s tools to dismantle the master’s house would be appropriate here.

Another “expert” on police – community relations is former Los Angeles Police Chief William Bratton. Bratton was also the head of the NYPD and for those interested on how well Bratton engaged with community here I would urge people to look up the cases of Yong Xin Huang, Anibal Carasquillo, Anthony Rosario, and Frankie Arzuaga.

The often cited problem with S-Comm has the face of an immigrant woman, a survivor of domestic violence who cannot trust the criminal justice system anymore now that it is linked with the immigration enforcement system. In this second part of the report, Robert Morgenthau, New York County District Attorney, 1975-2009 cites this very problem in his critique of S-Comm.

A spouse, for example, may be reluctant to report abuse if she fears
that the consequences will be deportation of the father of her children.

And there have been cases when the women reporting the violence have been placed in deportation proceedings. But the cry against S-Comm using the “Won’t you think of the abused women?” cry is misleading and assumes that law enforcement has and always has had the best interest of women of color struggling against violence in mind. I would urge people to read some of the work of INCITE!(PDF) on the issue, which takes the words and lives of women, transgender and gender non-conforming people of color and centers them when it comes to working against violence. Police intervention in domestic violence situations for our communities has not meant safety.

A young African American transgender woman living in Los Angeles reports that she called the police for help on many occasions because her boyfriend was abusive,
but they never investigated or took any action. However, one morning, following her most recent call, two undercover officers knocked on her door and arrested her, pursuant to an old warrant for solicitation.

A twenty-year study of 48 cities found that greater access to criminal legal remedies for survivors of domestic violence led to fewer men being killed by their wives, as women who might otherwise have killed to escape violence were offered alternatives. However women receiving legal support were no less likely to be killed by their intimate partners, and were exposed to additional retaliatory violence.

In all fairness, towards the end of this second section of the report, a transition starts to happen that FINALLY begins to center those most impacted by S-Comm. From the first voice not in law enforcement highlighted, the Rights Working Group, a national coalition of civil liberties, national security, immigrant rights and human rights organizations committed to restoring due process, we read about how Secure Communities seems to be using racial profiling in some areas:

ICE’s data, released through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Request by the Center for Constitutional Rights, the National Day Labor Organizing Network, and the Cardozo Immigration Justice Clinic reveal that some jurisdictions have abnormally high rates of non-criminal deportations under Secure Communities. For example, in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana 71% of Secure Communities deportations were noncriminals, and in New Orleans Parish 63% were noncriminals. This is particularly disturbing given that the New Orleans Police Department is under investigation by the Department of Justice for a pattern or practice of discriminatory policing.

It’s somewhat of a shame that the report starts by laying groundwork based in a false notion of good community = police relations in immigrant communities and that it takes so long to get the point that begins to look at the criminal justice system – on both the federal and local level as part of the problem. For me it really highlighted how much work there is still yet to do within so called advocate communities who are well funded and perhaps well intentioned but end up using the same lens we are struggling against. You can’t be against the polimigra when you are relying on the poli’s arguments.

The next parts of the report are more promising in terms of how they look at the history of anti-immigrant laws in the U.S., the relationship between prisons and the current immigration system and feature testimonios from those most directly impacted by Secure Communities.

I will go in depth into these parts in my next post but in the meantime let us have the same courage to challenge ourselves the way we claim to challenge the Obama administration, Congress, and others.

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