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List
of Endorsers / En espanol
National Statement to Support Human and Civil Rights
for All Immigrants And to Oppose Compromise Immigration
Reform Proposals
Fair
and Just Immigration Reform for All
April 2006
We stand together as immigrant, faith,
social justice, labor, peace, human and civil rights
organizations and other concerned communities to support
human and civil rights for all immigrants and to oppose
the immigration “reform” proposals presently
in the U.S. Senate. We oppose H.R. 4437, the immigration
bill passed in the House of Representatives in December,
as well as all of the compromise bills presented in
the Senate.
We call upon members of Congress and
the Administration to stop masquerading these proposals
as immigration reform. We demand nothing less than immigration
policies that are fair and just, and that respect the
rights and dignity of all immigrants and other members
of our society.
The rush to reach a bipartisan accord
on immigration legislation has led to a compromise that
would create deep divisions within the immigrant community
and leave millions of undocumented immigrants in the
shadows of our country. We oppose the behind-the-scenes
brokering currently playing out in the legislative process.
These trade-offs and deals are based on election-year
campaigning and demands by business lobbyists, rather
than on the best interests and voices of immigrant communities.
We say, “No deal!”
In a re-ignited civil rights movement,
millions of immigrants, their families, neighbors and
co-workers, along with faith and labor leaders, peace
and justice advocates, have marched and rallied in cities
across the U.S. The mobilizations have served as a wake-up
call for the whole country to acknowledge the vital
role of immigrants as co-workers, neighbors and members
of our broad society. And, as details of the current
legislative compromise have become known, the voices
of immigrant communities are rejecting the proposals
for a so-called legalization program, and are denouncing
the further erosion of human and civil rights through
the enforcement and criminalization provisions. The
stakes are considerable, and affect all of us.
This year is the 20th anniversary of
the 1986 legalization and employer sanctions law, and
the 10th anniversary of the restrictive Illegal Immigration
Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act. We cannot allow
the current proposals to be enacted as this generation’s
flawed immigration reform legacy.
What We Want: Fair and Just Immigration
Reform
Fair and just immigration reform means:
* Genuine legalization and opportunities
to adjust status for all undocumented immigrants, including
youth and farmworkers
* Preservation of due process, including
restoration of access to the courts and meaningful judicial
review for immigrants.
* No indefinite detention or expansion
of mandatory detention
* No expansion of guest worker programs
* No more wasted resources allocated
to further militarize our borders and that contribute
to the crisis of human rights and lives in the border
regions
* An end to employer sanctions and
electronic worker verification systems
* The strengthening and enforcement
of labor law protections for all workers, native and
foreign born
* No use of city, state or other government
agencies in the enforcement of immigration law
* No more criminalization of immigrants,
or their service providers
* Expansion of legal immigration opportunities,
support for family reunification and immediate processing
of the backlog of pending visa applications
* Elimination of harsh obstacles to
immigrating, including the HIV ban, “3 and 10
year bars,” and high income requirements for immigrant
sponsors.
The
Current ‘Legalization’ Proposal is Unacceptable
The proposed 3-tiered temporary worker
program offers little hope for broad, inclusive legalization
of undocumented immigrants. What some are calling a
“path to citizenship” in the last Senate
bill is merely a massive temporary worker program without
worker protections, and contains numerous hurdles that
will drastically limit the number of undocumented immigrants
who can actually legalize. Such a program would divide
communities, including mixed-status families, erode
wage and benefits standards, and place a greater burden
on safety-net services.
The
Enforcement Proposals Undermine All of our Rights
Significant provisions in the current
Senate proposals would dramatically undermine a broad
array of rights, increase the criminalization of all
immigrants, result in mass deportations, and unfairly
exclude millions from eligibility for any legalization
opportunity. The expansion of expedited removal would
eliminate the right to a court hearing, while the broadened
definition of “aggravated felony” to include
many minor offenses would result in mandatory detention
and mass deportations. The proposals also seek to reinstate
indefinite detention and increase detention facilities,
including the use of closed military bases. Encouraging
local police to enforce immigration law would not only
add an additional burden that detracts from current
responsibilities, but would discourage immigrant access
to public safety institutions.
Moreover, the increased resources to
militarize the border, which has already cost over $30
billion in the past 12 years, has not deterred unauthorized
border crossings and instead has caused a humanitarian
crisis with the deaths of some 4,000 people in the desert.
Current border enforcement policies, laws and practices,
without provision for safe and legal entry, have resulted
in the detention and criminalization of tens of thousands
of people at a significant daily cost to taxpayers.
The
Proposals Fail to Protect Workers
The current proposals would further
erode already weak labor protections and rights for
immigrants and other workers. Immigrant workers have
historically been used as “cheap labor”
by employers and industries unwilling to pay decent
wages or to maintain reasonable working conditions.
These proposals continue in that same shameful vein,
and are designed to force and keep wages down to compete
with cheap labor suppliers globally.
Workers need more, not less, rights.
A real legalization proposal needs to be coupled with
the repeal of employer sanctions, the provision of the
landmark 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act that
has led to the criminalization of immigrant workers,
and which would be deepened through an expansion of
an employment verification system. This program has
done nothing in the last twenty years but increase discrimination
and abuse of immigrant workers.
Employers have had greater leverage
to threaten and intimidate immigrant workers, break
organizing efforts, carry out unjust firings, and lower
wages and work conditions for all working people. These
abuses impact the entire American workforce, particularly
the most vulnerable toiling in low-wage jobs such as
farmworkers, day laborers and domestic workers.
No
Expansion of Guest Worker Programs
A key concern is the significant expansion
of guest worker programs found in almost all Senate
proposals and supported by the Administration. We oppose
these programs both when they are tied to legalization
for undocumented immigrants already living and working
here, and as a means for managing future flows of immigrants
into the United States. The U.S. does not have a shortage
of workers; what we have is a shortage of employers
willing to pay a living wage and maintain decent working
conditions.
Guest worker programs have been condemned
by labor and immigrant communities for their long record
of violations of labor rights and standards, including
blacklists and deportations of workers who protest.
In 1964, Ernesto Galarza, Cesar Chavez and other defenders
of workplace rights won the abolition of the old Bracero
guest worker program. The purpose of that program, they
said, was the creation a vulnerable workforce in order
to drive down wages and break union organizing efforts
among immigrants and non-immigrants alike. The purpose
of current proposals is the same. Temporary, contract
workers are prevented the option of putting down roots
and becoming full and equal members of our communities.
Future migrants should not be forced
to accept a second-class status, violating our country's
most basic commitments to equality. They should be given
permanent residence status, allowing them to work and
travel freely, to exercise their labor rights, and to
live as any other member of our society.
No
Compromise, No Deal on Fair and Just Immigration Reform
In recent years, immigrant community
members, including youth and students, farmworkers and
others, have effectively organized and rallied in support
of legislative proposals to strengthen their rights
and opportunities to be equal members of this society.
Despite the loud and determined voice of immigrant communities,
advocates and supporters for fair and just immigration
reform this year, we have yet to see an acceptable proposal
from Congress. And with H.R. 4437 already passed by
the House, we are very aware that any proposal from
the Senate would be subject to further compromise in
a Senate-House reconciliation process, and would likely
produce laws that would detrimentally affect current
and future immigrants for years to come.
Increased enforcement does not address
the complex issue of global migration. Employer sanctions
and beefed up border security have been in place for
decades as deterrents to migration, and yet the number
of undocumented continues to grow. The sources of migration
rest in the problems of economic and political instability,
poverty and war in migrant-sending countries.
Despite the urgency of the immigration
issue in this country, it is clearly not just a “domestic”
issue and our policies need to consider support for
economic stability, fair trade agreements and peace
as vital to addressing the migration of people in search
of work, survival, and safety.
We will continue to raise our voices
for genuine immigration reform that respects the rights
and dignity of all immigrants, and is fair and just.
Immigrant workers, students and families are making
incredible sacrifices to raise their voices for themselves
and future generations, in the face of recriminations
and disciplinary actions from employers and schools.
As immigrant communities continue to mobilize for their
rights, on May 1 and beyond, we will support their right
and choice to express themselves.
We
pledge to increase public education efforts and the
building and mobilization of meaningful alliances, and
we will encourage and support immigrant community leadership
to advance real immigration reform. We call upon Congress
and the Administration to heed the voices of immigrant
communities demanding genuine immigration reforms: real
legalization, equitable inclusion in our society, justice,
and respect for human rights.
LIST
OF ENDORSERS
To
endorse this statement, please fill out this
form.
Organizational
Endorsers (As of June 1, 2006)
Access California Services (Anaheim, CA)
Adhikaar (Staten Island, NY)
AFL-CIO (Washington, DC)
Alliance for Global Justice (Washington, DC)
Alliance of South Asians Taking Action (ASATA) (Oakland,
CA)
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee -- Massachusetts
Chapter (Boston, MA)
American Friends Service Committee-Austin (Austin, TX)
American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) (Philadelphia,
PA)
Applied Research Center (Oakland, CA)
Arab American Family Support Center (Brooklyn, NY)
Arab Community Center for Economic and Social Services
(ACCESS) (Dearborn, MI)
Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund (AALDEF)
(New York, NY)
Asian and Pacific Islander American Health Forum (San
Francisco, CA)
Asian Immigrant Women Advocates (Oakland, CA)
Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance, San Francisco
Chapter (San Francisco, CA)
Asian Pacific Environmental Network (Oakland, CA)
Asociacion Latina (Clarksville, TN)
Aztlan Media Kollective (East Los Angeles & San
Francisco, CA)
Audre Lorde Project (New York, NY)
Bay Area Coalition to Fight the Minutemen (San Francisco,
CA)
Bay Area Immigrant Rights Coalition (Oakland, CA)
Bay Area Labor Committee for Peace & Justice (Oakland,
CA)
Black Alliance for Just Immigration (Berkeley, CA)
Bonilla Community Services (Durham, NC)
Border Agricultural Workers Project (El Paso, TX)
Building Opportunities for Self-Sufficiency (Berkeley,
CA)
Black Workers for Justice (North Carolina)
Breakthrough: Building Human Rights Culture (New York,
NY)
CAAAV Organizing Asian Communities (New York, NY)
California Partnership (Los Angeles, CA)
Casa de Esperanza (Bound Brook, NY)
CASA Latina (Seattle, WA)
Center for Constitutional Rights (New York, NY)
Center for Immigrant Families (New York, NY)
Central Valley Progressive PAC (Fresno, CA)
CENTRO HISPANO "Cuzcatlán" (Jamaica,
NY)
CAA: Chinese for Affirmative Action/Center for Asian
American Advocacy (San Francisco, CA)
Chicano Consortium (Sacramento, CA)
Chinese Progressive Association (San Francisco, CA)
Coalición de Derechos Humanos (Tucson, AZ)
Coalición de Trabajadores de Immokalee (Immokalee,
FL)
Comite NO NOS VAMOS (Fresno, CA)
Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism
(San Francisco, CA)
Committees of Correspondence for Democracy & Socialism
(New York, NY)
Community HIV/AIDS Mobilization Project (CHAMP) (Providence,
RI)
Desis Rising Up & Moving (DRUM) (New York, NY)
East Bay Asian Local Development Corporation (Oakland,
CA)
Eastern Massachusetts Jobs with Justice
Enlace (Portland, OR)
Environmental Justice Action (Portland, OR)
Esperanza Peace and Justice Center (San Antonio, TX)
Ethnic Studies Department, University of Hawaii (Honolulu,
HI)
Families for Freedom (Brooklyn, NY)
Farmworker Association of Florida (Apopka, FL)
Farmworker Legal Services of NY, Inc. (Rochester, NY)
Farmworkers Self-Help (Dade City, FL)
Filipinos for Affirmative Action (Oakland, CA)
Filipino Civil Rights Advocates (FilCRA) (Oakland, CA)
Four Lakes Green Party of Dane County (Madison, WI)
Frente Continental (Los Angeles, CA)
Frente Indígena de Organizaciones Binacionales
(FIOB) (Fresno, CA)
Fuerza Unida (San Antonio, TX)
Gay Men’s Health Crisis (New York, NY)
Gente Unida/San Diego Border Coalition for Human Rights
(Chula Vista, CA)
Green Party of Alameda County (Berkeley, CA)
Gustavus Myers Center for the Study of Bigotry and Human
Rights (Boston, MA)
Hate Free Zone (Seattle, WA)
Health Initiatives for Youth (San Francisco, CA)
Hermandad Mexicana Latinoamericana (Federal Way, WA)
Highlander Research and Education Center (New Market,
TN)
Hispanic American Association (West Babylon, NY)
Hispanic Organizations Leadership Alliance (Washington,
DC)
Homies Unidos (Los Angeles, CA)
Iglesia San Romero de Las Americas-UCC (New York, NY)
Iglesia Metodista Unida Summerfield (New York, NY)
Immigrant Communities in Action (New York, NY)
Immigrant Justice Solidarity Project (Brooklyn, NY)
Immigrant Rights Vermont
Immigration Equality (New York, NY)
Inmigrantes Latinos en Accion (Austin, TX)
International Institute of the East Bay (Oakland, CA)
Jews for Racial and Economic Justice (New York, NY)
JILPA (Phoenix, AZ)
Junta Centro Mujer Dominicana (New York, NY)
Korean Americans United For Peace (Bay Area, CA)
Korean Community Center of the East Bay (Oakland, CA)
Koreatown Immigrant Workers Alliance (KIWA), (Los Angeles,
CA)
Korean Youth Cultural Center (Oakland, CA)
La Raza Centro Legal, SF Day Labor Program (San Francisco,
CA)
Labor Council for Latin American Advancement--Massachusetts
Chapter
Latino Union of Chicago (Chicago, IL)
Los Angeles Coalition to End Hunger and Homelessness
(Los Angeles, CA)
Massachusetts Jobs with Justice (Boston, MA)
Maternal and Child Health Access (Los Angeles, CA)
Migrant Worker Solidarity of Douglas County (Eudora,
KS)
Migration Policy & Resource Center/Occidental College
(Los Angeles, CA)
Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance (Jackson, MS)
National Association of People with AIDS (NAPWA) (Silver
Spring, MD)
National Immigrant Solidarity Network (South Pasadena,
CA)
National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers
Guild (Boston, MA)
National Network for Arab American Communities (NNAAC)
National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights (Oakland,
CA)
Network in Solidarity with the People of Guatemala (NISGUA)
(Washington, DC)
Network in Solidarity with the People of the Philippines
(Jackson Heights, NY)
Nicaragua Network (Washington, DC)
North American Alliance for Fair Employment (Boston,
MA)
North Carolina Justice Center (Durham, NC)
Nuestra Casa (East Palo Alto, CA)
Orange County Peace & Freedom Party (Anaheim, CA)
The Oakland Institute (Oakland, CA)
Padres/Jovenes Unidos (Denver, CO)
Peace and Freedom Party
Peace and Freedom Party of Fresno County (Clovis, CA)
Philippine U.S. Solidarity Organization (Seattle, WA)
Pilipino Workers Center of Southern California (Los
Angeles, CA)
Project Voice New England -- American Friends Service
Committee (Boston, MA)
Rural Organizing Project (Scappoose, OR)
San Francisco Day Labor Program Women’s Collective
of La Raza Centro Legal (San Francisco, CA)
Section of Christian Social Responsibility, Women’s
Division, United Methodist Church (New York, NY
Southeast Regional Economic Justice Network (Durham,
NC)
Southwest Network for Environmental and Economic Justice
(Albuquerque, NM)
Southwest Organizing Project (Albuquerque, NM)
Southwest Workers' Union (San Antonio, TX)
South Asian Network (Artesia, CA)
Speak Out - The Institute for Democratic Education and
Culture (Emeryville, CA)
Stanislaus & Tuolumne Counties Central Labor Council
(Modesto, CA)
Student/Farmworker Alliance (Immokalee, FL)
The Applied Research Center (Oakland, CA)
ThinkingPeople (Mount Pleasant, SC)
Third World Majority (Oakland, CA)
United for a Fair Economy (Boston, MA)
Urban Justice Center (New York, NY)
UP (United Progressives) for Democracy, Hip Hop Caucus,
Cities for Progress, Gulf Coast Renewal Campaign (Washington,
DC)
US-Mexico Border Program / American Friends Service
Committee (San Diego, CA)
Voluntarios de la Comunidad (Sacramento, CA)
War Times/Tiempo de Guerras (Emeryville, CA)
WILD for Human Rights (San Francisco, CA)
Women’s International League for Peace & Freedom
-- Fresno Branch (Fresno, CA)
International
Endorsers
Asian Migrant Centre (Hong Kong)
Asia Pacific Mission for Migrants (APMM) (Hong Kong)
December18.net (Belgium)
Indignacion: Promocion y Defensa de los Derechos Humanos
A.C. (Merida, Yucatan, Mexico)
Instituto Nacional de APOYO A Victimas y Estudios en
Criminalidad, A.C. (Mexico City, Mexico)
Labour, Health and Human Rights Development Centre (Lagos,
Nigeria)
Migrant Forum Asia (Manila, Philippines)
Migrant Rights International (Geneva, Switzerland)
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