The Immigrant’s Journal Vol. 116
Our leaders who stood for Unity & Justice
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Protecting God’s Children From Distant Lands
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How the Coronavirus Is Impacting Immigration
Pence Praises Workers the Administration Wants to Deport
BY MELISSA CRUZ
BY FRANK SHARRY, AMERICA’S VOICE
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pread of the new coronavirus, COVID-19, has caused panic across the United States. With the number of confirmed cases on the rise, the coronavirus has started to affect several facets of immigration. How government officials handle the virus could have a significant impact on people navigating our immigration process, their health, and the immigration system at large. Some government responses have already made an impact. USCIS Office Closures Over Coronavirus U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) shut down its Seattle field office on Tuesday, March 3 due to concerns over the coronavirus. An
I employee of the USCIS office had visited a family member at the Life Care Center in Kirkland, Washington before it was confirmed the facility had an outbreak of the virus. Other USCIS offices may close as the virus spreads across the United States.
USCIS is tracking office closures on their website. Those waiting outside the Seattle office last week were surprised to find it closed. One man, who had been ordered to leave the country for Mexico, couldn’t get to continued on page 2
Why Undocumented Immigrants Still Fear the 2020 Census enforcement authorities. Fear of being detained to face a deportation hearing. And, ultimately, fear of being deported. If data is missing from the 2020 census, that will harm national and community planning efforts.
BY MARY LEHMAN HELD THE CONVERSATION
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he United States might not be able to get information about more than 10 million people in the 2020 census. That’s the number of undocumented immigrants living in the United States. Another 16.7 million individuals live in a household with an undocumented member and so might also not be counted in this year’s census.
The primary reason that undocumented immigrants might forego participation in the 2020 census? Fear. Fear of being found by immigration
Fear of deportation The fear of being deported to one’s home country extends well beyond wanting to remain in the United States to simply have a better life. continued on page 6
What Happens at an Immigration Fraud Marriage Interview... page 5
Announcing Immigrant Heritage Week 2020: Thank You, Immigrant New York!
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April 16, 2020
n April 13, 2020, the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs (MOIA) kicks off its annual Immigrant Heritage Week (IHW), which this year will recognize New York City’s essential workers. Among the one million essential workers who are on the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic—delivery workers, EMS staff, drivers, health care personnel, and more—half are immigrants. This year’s IHW—running through April 19 and featuring virtual opportunities for all New Yorkers to join the celebration—is dedicated to those 500,000 immigrant New Yorkers who are keeping our city running every day. l
n the midst of a lethal pandemic, all of us are thankful for the essential workers who are risking their lives to save ours. Many are immigrants, many are undocumented. But thanks to the Trump-Pence administration, these essential workers live in daily fear of being deported. They may be ‘inspiring’ as Pence says; they are also in the administration’s crosshairs. The administration has ended DACA and TPS in an effort to put some one million undocumented immigrants with temporary work permits on a path to deportations. The administration keeps the dangerous and relentless detention and deportation machine running at full tilt. The administration, with help from its enablers in Congress, has done everything possible to scare immigrants away from seeking testing and treatment. If Vice-President Pence and the Trump administration really want to celebrate immigrant workers doing essential work, they should withdraw their assault on DACA and TPS in the courts, and automatically renew work permits. If Pence and Trump really want to praise these essential workers, they would be looking for ways to expand the number of undocumented immigrants eligible for work permits so they can take their minds off avoiding ICE and keep their focus on conquering COVID-19. If Pence and Trump really wanted to bring our country together, with no one left behind and no one left out, they would include rather than exclude immigrants in the next Congressional rescue package. We have too much experience with this administration to fall for pretty words. This is an administration that consistently demonizes immigrants and acts cruelly, all in the service of juicing turnout and clinging to power. Mike Pence’s gauzy spin does not drive the administration’s hardline policies toward immigrants; Trump and Stephen Miller do. l Frank Sharry is Executive Director of America’s Voice