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Free Legal Clinics Available for Undocumented Youth
Author: KoreAm
Posted: August 7th, 2012
«Stewart Kwoh and Rep. Judy Chu. Photo courtesy of APALC.
by EUGENE YI
Young undocumented students seeking to remain in the United States can receive free legal assistance from the Asian Pacific American Legal Center (APALC).
The APALC will hold its clinics from 2:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday. APALC staff and trained volunteers will be on hand to answer questions and guide individuals through the process of collecting the necessary documents to apply.
“Thank goodness we have organizations like the Asian Pacific American Legal Center, which is here to provide legal advice for your individual situation, and you really need to get that advice before you submit your applications,” said U.S. Rep Judy Chu yesterday at a press conference at the APALC office near downtown LA.
Support the No Papers No Fear Ride for Justice
On July 24th, undocumented members of Puente came out at the racial profiling trial of Sheriff Arpaio and were arrested in civil disobedience.
This summer, we are coming out of the shadows and getting on the bus. Our rights and our families are under attack and we’ve come too far to go back now.
Undocumented riders will come out publicly, support local people to build barrio defense, and perform peaceful civil disobedience to challenge the promoters of hate and set an example of love and fearlessness from Arizona to the Democratic National Convention in North Carolina.
Please click to donate for their bail fund.
You can get more info at www.NoPapersNoFear.org, also on facebook at: UnDocuBus
In Denver, you can contact Huy Ong of Jobs with Justice huy@jwj.org or Marco Nuñez of Centro Humanitario mnunez@centrohumanitario.org
In Austin, you can contact Sarahi Uribe at sarahi@ndlon.org
POMONA: El Concejo Municipal aprueba estación de transferencia de residuos
ALEJANDRO CANO/ ESPECIAL PARA LA PRENSA
Publicado: 17 julio 2012 02:55 PM
Pomona – A pesar de la gran oposición y después de escuchar decenas de testimonios y argumentos en contra y a favor, el Concejo Municipal de Pomona aprobó la noche del lunes 16 de julio la construcción de una estación de transferencia de residuos que estará ubicada en un vecindario latino y rodeado de varias escuelas.
Con dos votos de 4-2, el Concejo certificó un estudio ambiental y un mapa tentativo para la construcción de la estación llamada Grand Central Recycling que será administrada por la compañía Valley Vista. Un tercer voto de 4-1 aprobó un permiso condicional para la construcción del proyecto que estará ubicado en la cuadra 1300 de la calle East Ninth.
La concejal Cristina Carrizosa, quien abandonó el auditorio de Western University of Health Sciences, en donde se llevó a cabo la reunión para acomodar a más de 350 personas, votó en contra del proyecto al igual que el vice alcalde Freddie Rodríguez quien actuó como líder después que el alcalde Ellioth Rothman se excusó para evitar conflictos de interés. Rothman recibió dinero para su campaña de la compañía Valley Vista.
Carrizosa propuso llevar el tema a la boleta de noviembre mientras que Rodríguez argumento la salud de los residentes está por encima de los ingresos económicos.
“Claro que queremos generar ingresos, pero la pregunta es qué tan desesperados estamos. ¿Vale la pena poner en riesgo la salud de los habitantes por ingresos que no aseguran que la biblioteca ni la estación de bomberos permanecerán abiertas? No lo creo”, comentó Rodríguez.
El concejal se refirió a los fondos que supuestamente generará la compañía para la ciudad y al problema económico que enfrenta la municipalidad. El mes pasado, el Concejo aprobó mantener la estación de bomberos y la biblioteca municipal a cambio de recortes en otros departamentos pero no aseguró su futuro debido a déficit fiscal que encara la ciudad.
Según la administradora Linda Lowry, el millón de dólares en impuestos que supuestamente generará la compañía a la ciudad no es suficiente para mantener ningún facilidad abierta ya que el costo aproximado de reparación de calles debido al daño ocasionado por los más de 300 camiones de basura que transitarán por la ciudad todos los días excede los $5 millones.
La estación de transferencia de basura estará ubicada en una propiedad de 10.5 acres en un vecindario predominantemente habitado por residentes de origen hispano y estará rodeado por siete escuelas con aproximadamente mil estudiantes cada una.
Un estudio ambiental aseguró que el proyecto creará problemas de ruido y tráfico durante la construcción pero que mermarán cuando la obra este completa.
El estudio descartó problemas con cáncer y enfermedades respiratorias debido a la presencia de la estación, argumentos utilizados por oponentes al proyecto.
Una vez en operación, la estación recibirá mil toneladas de basura al día, 500 toneladas menos de lo propuesto. En realidad, la cantidad debió haber sido reducida para que el proyecto fuera aprobado. La moción fue hecha por la concejal Danielle Soto, quien según Larry Ortega, presidente de Community Union Inc violó los reglamentos del Brown Act debido a que su jefe de campaña labora para la compañía Valley Vista.
Soto no pudo ser entrevistada después de la reunión y tampoco contestó a llamados de La Prensa.
La concejal Ginna Escobar, quien durante las seis horas que duró la reunión se mostro aburrida y desinteresada, así como el concejal Stephen Atchley, argumentaron que el proyecto generará empleos y que es una buena oportunidad para generar ingresos y evitar así la posible bancarrota de la ciudad.
“Hoy estamos hablando de abrir un negocio que generará 50 o más empleos. Mañana podríamos estar hablando sobre la bancarrota debido a la crisis económica. Yo prefiero abrir negocios”, dijo Atchley.
Frank García, director ejecutivo de la Cámara de Comercio de Pomona, indicó que la estación de transferencia de residuos es una estación de primer nivel que no emitirá contaminantes y que al contrario beneficiará a la región. Sin embargo, Linda Hinojos, residente local, aseguró el concejo vendió su voto para favorecer a empresas en lugar de mirar por el bienestar de la comunidad.
Hinojos, así como un grupo de opositores al proyecto, abandonaron el recinto con gritos y visiblemente enojados con un concejo que “debería tener vergüenza” luego de que la moción para llevar el tema a la boleta falló. La concejal Escobar despidió con la mano a los manifestantes que interrumpieron la reunión en varias ocasiones con gritos y cánticos.
“Vendidos, deberían tener vergüenza y apoyar a la gente no a las grandes empresas. Que vergüenza”, indicó Hinojos. “¿A caso no les importa el futuro de los niños? ¿A caso no tienen pantalones para decirle ‘no’ a las empresas?”
En realidad, los gritos comenzaron desde antes de iniciada la reunión. Afuera del recinto, cuatro grupos manifestaban su punto de vista para crear un caos visual.
Por una parte estaban los miembros de Inland Empire Sponsoring Committee (IESC por sus siglas en ingles), el cual negoció con la empresa para apoyar el proyecto. Por otra parte se encontraban los miembros de la coalición de justicia ambiental quienes argumentaron el proyecto creará empleos que beneficiarán a familias locales.
En un tercer plano estaban los que apoyaban el proyecto tal y cual y por último los opositores que repudiaron el proyecto y cualquier negociación.
Lideres de IESC demandaron que la compañía debería recibir basura local en vez de basura regional; que los camiones no utilicen diesel; que la estación no sea utilizada para cargar combustible; que la empresa se responsabilice para la contratación de un inspector de seguridad; que formen parte de un comité especial para garantizar la no contaminación ambiental; y que le den prioridad a residentes de Pomona al momento de ofrecer empleos.
David Pérez, vice presidente de Valley Vista accedió a las demandas y presentó los cambios durante su turno en el micrófono de la sección de comentarios públicos — algo que Carrizosa vio como falta de consideración y una manera de convencimiento a los demás concejales.
Al final de la reunión, Pérez dijo a La Prensa que la empresa operará bajo la ley estatal y federal y que los argumentos en contra le ayudarán a mejorar la calidad de servicio.
Membership Meeting of the Latino and Latina Roundtable
The membership meeting of the Latino and Latina Roundtable will be this Saturday, July 28 at 1 PM at the Pitzer College Broad Center room 208 (1050 N. Mills Ave. in Claremont). The agenda will include reports from the various committees — Political Action, Immigrant Rights, and Organizational Development. We will summarize our recent forum on Obama’s deferred policy, the organization’s bar b’ que, our role in the recent Waste Transfer Station issue, upcoming forums on immigrant rights and voter initiatives, voter registration with the Pomona Unified School District, our co-sponsorship of a “Helping Communities to Succeed and Strengtheing Our NonProfit Sector” Community Forum conference at the Village Conference Center on Friday, August 17th, and our co-sponsorship of a forum on the Trust Act on Saturday, August 4th. Please Arrive on Time because we have a lot to go over.
2012 Minority Youth Environmental Training Institute l Las Vegas, New Mexico
For those who have not seen our previous emails, the National Hispanic Environmental Council (NHEC) is still accepting applications from students to participate in our upcoming 11th annual “Minority Youth Environmental Training Institute” to be held July 20–30, 2012 in Las Vegas, New Mexico and other beautiful areas of Northern NM. (note: this is New Mexico, not Las Vegas in Nevada). Interested students should apply as soon as possible for the slots that remain.
Through a full scholarship NHEC will COVER ALL COSTS for accepted students, including round-trip airfare, housing, meals, books, science equipment, and more for the 11 day long Institute.
Like our NYC and CA regional Institutes, the national Institute in NM is an intensive, residential, science-based, 11 day long environmental education AND environmental career training program for top students, aged 16—19, deeply interested/active in the environment. Students are selected competitively from all across the U.S. and Puerto Rico. Note that students in both high school and college are eligible to apply.
The NM Institute is being funded by several sponsors, including the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, USDA Natural Resource Conservation Service, and the U.S Forest Service. Utilizing an Environmental STEM curriculum students will learn about a wide range of environmental issues, as well as conduct field studies (testing air, water, soil, plus doing biological assessments, birding, and more) using professional-grade environmental science equipment, taught by NHEC’s experienced instructors and other environmental professionals. Students learn in a variety of sites, including national parks, national wildlife refuges, national forests, laboratories, and more.
Students are housed and fed at New Mexico Highlands University (in Las Vegas, NM) and closely supervised by NHEC staff/instructors. The Institute is designed to build the next generation of environmental leaders and professionals. Students learn about key natural resource and environmental topics, as well as the wide range of careers in the natural resource and environmental arena, plus how to land jobs/internships with our federal agency sponsors. These agencies are actively seeking to recruit Institute students to work for them this year and next, and will have recruiters on-site to interact with students.
In addition to our Instructors, NHEC uses an overlay of volunteer “role models” — working minority professionals from every environmental field — who participate each year. These role models are present daily (4-5 each day, every day) who help teach the curriculum, inspire the students, and share their “environmental journey”. Role models contribute their scientific technical knowledge and policy issue expertise.
The attached pdf files contain all materials necessary for students to apply. Please read the “Fact Sheet” first, as it has key information about the program. Interested students should apply as soon as possible as the Institute is fast approaching.
To view photos from previous NM and regional Institutes, go to: www.nheec.org
We also ask that you forward this email on to those you think might be interested in this highly educational program, including qualified students, fellow educators, high schools, colleges, youth organizations, and more. We appreciate your help.
Feel free to contact NHEC, especially our Programs Coordinator, Juan Rodriguez, at jrodriguez@nheec1.org or myself, at rrivera@nheec1.org or NHEC at 703-683-3956 if you have any questions. Thank you!
Roger Rivera
President, NHEC
Why ‘illegal immigrant’ is a slur
By Charles Garcia, Special to CNN
updated 1:34 PM EDT, Thu July 5, 2012
Last month’s Supreme Court decision in the landmark Arizona immigration case was groundbreaking for what it omitted: the words “illegal immigrants” and “illegal aliens,” except when quoting other sources. The court’s nonjudgmental language established a humanistic approach to our current restructuring of immigration policy.
When you label someone an “illegal alien” or “illegal immigrant” or just plain “illegal,” you are effectively saying the individual, as opposed to the actions the person has taken, is unlawful. The terms imply the very existence of an unauthorized migrant in America is criminal.
In this country, there is still a presumption of innocence that requires a jury to convict someone of a crime. If you don’t pay your taxes, are you an illegal? What if you get a speeding ticket? A murder conviction? No. You’re still not an illegal. Even alleged terrorists and child molesters aren’t labeled illegals.
By becoming judge, jury and executioner, you dehumanize the individual and generate animosity toward them. New York Times editorial writer Lawrence Downes says “illegal” is often “a code word for racial and ethnic hatred.”
The term “illegal immigrant” was first used in 1939 as a slur by the British toward Jews who were fleeing the Nazis and entering Palestine without authorization. Holocaust survivor and Nobel Peace Prize winner Elie Wiesel aptly said that “no human being is illegal.”
Migrant workers residing unlawfully in the U.S. are not — and never have been — criminals. They are subject to deportation, through a civil administrative procedure that differs from criminal prosecution, and where judges have wide discretion to allow certain foreign nationals to remain here.
News: For immigrants and opponents, court’s ruling hits their real lives
Another misconception is that the vast majority of migrant workers currently out of status sneak across our southern border in the middle of the night. Actually, almost half enter the U.S. with a valid tourist or work visa and overstay their allotted time. Many go to school, find a job, get married and start a family. And some even join the Marine Corps, like Lance Cpl. Jose Gutierrez, who was the first combat veteran to die in the Iraq War. While he was granted American citizenship posthumously, there are another 38,000 undocumented soldiers defending our country.
Justice Anthony Kennedy, writing for the majority, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and three other justices, stated: “As a general rule, it is not a crime for a removable alien to remain present in the United States.” The court also ruled that it was not a crime to seek or engage in unauthorized employment.
As Kennedy explained, removal of an unauthorized migrant is a civil matter where even if the person is out of status, federal officials have wide discretion to determine whether deportation makes sense. For example, if an unauthorized person is trying to support his family by working or has “children born in the United States, long ties to the community, or a record of distinguished military service,” officials may let him stay. Also, if individuals or their families might be politically persecuted or harmed upon return to their country of origin, they may also remain in the United States.
While the Supreme Court has chosen language less likely to promote hatred and divisiveness, journalists continue using racially offensive language.
University of Memphis journalism professor Thomas Hrach conducted a study of 122,000 news stories published between 2000 and 2010, to determine which terms are being used to describe foreign nationals in the U.S. who are out of status. He found that 89% of the time during this period, journalists used the biased terms “illegal immigrant” and “illegal alien.”
Hrach discovered that there was a substantial increase in the use of the term “illegal immigrant,” which he correlated back to the Associated Press Stylebook’s decision in 2004 to recommend “illegal immigrant” to its members. (It’s the preferred term at CNN and The New York Times as well.) The AP Stylebook is the decisive authority on word use at virtually all mainstream daily newspapers, and it’s used by editors at television, radio and electronic news media. According to the AP, this term is “accurate and neutral.”
For the AP to claim that “illegal immigrant” is “accurate and neutral” is like Moody’s giving Bernie Madoff’s hedge fund a triple-A rating for safety and creditworthiness.
It’s almost as if the AP were following the script of pollster and Fox News contributor Frank Luntz, considered the foremost GOP expert on crafting the perfect conservative political message. In 2005, he produced a 25-page secret memorandum that would radically alter the immigration debate to distort public perception of the issue.
The secret memorandum almost perfectly captures Mitt Romney’s position on immigration — along with that of every anti-immigrant politician and conservative pundit. For maximum impact, Luntz urges Republicans to offer fearful rhetoric: “This is about overcrowding of YOUR schools, emergency room chaos in YOUR hospitals, the increase in YOUR taxes, and the crime in YOUR communities.” He also encourages them to talk about “border security,” because after 9/11, this “argument does well among all voters — even hardcore Democrats,” as it conjures up the specter of terrorism.
George Orwell’s classic “Nineteen Eighty-Four” shows how even a free society is susceptible to manipulation by overdosing on worn-out prefabricated phrases that convert people into lifeless dummies, who become easy prey for the political class.
News: For immigrant graduates, a ‘leap of faith has been answered,’ educator says
In “Nineteen Eighty-Four,” Orwell creates a character named Syme who I find eerily similar to Luntz. Syme is a fast-talking word genius in the research department of the Ministry of Truth. He invents doublespeak for Big Brother and edits the Newspeak Dictionary by destroying words that might lead to “thoughtcrimes.” Section B contains the doublespeak words with political implications that will spread in speakers’ minds like a poison.
In Luntz’s book “Words That Work,” Appendix B lists “The 21 Political Words and Phrases You Should Never Say Again.” For example, destroy “undocumented worker” and instead say “illegal immigrant,” because “the label” you use “determines the attitudes people have toward them.”
And the poison is effective. Surely it’s no coincidence that in 2010, hate crimes against Latinos made up 66% of the violence based on ethnicity, up from 45% in 2009, according to the FBI.
In his essay “Politics and the English Language,” Orwell warned that one must be constantly on guard against a ready-made phrase that “anaesthetizes a portion of one’s brain.” But Orwell also wrote that “from time to time one can even, if one jeers loudly enough, send some worn-out and useless phrase … into the dustbin, where it belongs” — just like the U.S. Supreme Court did.
Call Gloria Negrete McLeod to vote Yes on AB 1081
Local police & sheriffs need to stop working with ICE! Tell Senator Gloria Negrete McLeod to vote YES on AB 1081. The “Trust Act” will prevent everyday people from getting deported after interacting with police for small traffic violations & other small things. Call her Sacramento office (916) 651-4032 and her Montclair Office (909) 621-2783 NOW! The Senate vote may be this Thursday! Assembly is later.
March in Protest of Walmart – Los Angeles
Photos from Melissa Ayala
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