MIRA Blog
MIRA advocates for the rights and opportunities of immigrants and refugees. In partnership with its members, MIRA advances this mission through policy analysis and advocacy, institutional organizing, training and leadership development, and strategic communications.
As part of the Tufts Hillel Moral Voices lecture series, Deval Patrick spoke at the university on Monday about immigration rhetoric and voiced concerns regarding existing and pending immigration policies. Continue reading to take a look at what the governor had to say by reading the speech’s transcript.
It is that time of year when high school seniors eagerly await their college acceptance letters. For many, of course, acceptance does not guarantee access. Undocumented students must still pay 2-3 times more tuition than other students to attend public colleges in our state, regardless of their contributions to their communities, number of years in the U.S., or the absence of any choice in whether to immigrate. Because they are also ineligible for public financial aid, college is therefore a financial impossibility for many undocumented students. The Massachusetts legislature, for the fourth time in the last decade, has deferred these students the equal access to higher education they deserve.
Last summer, students, educators, business leaders and other supporters of higher education equality packed a State House hearing room to testify in favor of An Act regarding higher education opportunities for high school graduates. This bill would remedy our state's current discriminatory policy by allowing all students to pay in-state tuition rates at public colleges in Massachusetts provided they attend high school for at least three years in our state and graduate or obtain a GED. The bill would also generate $7.4 million per year once fully implemented, according to the Massachusetts Taxpayers Association, without crowding classrooms.
Last week, An Act regarding higher education opportunities for high school graduates was "sent to study" by the Joint Committee on Higher Education, effectively halting progress for the remainder of this year. While it was convenient for politicians to not take up a reasonable and pragmatic bill because of yet another election season, many students are left again with the burden of sending themselves to study with unrealistic costs, or not pursue college at all.
By kicking the can down the road, the Legislature is not only failing these students, but also wasting talent of a population most likely tostay, contribute to the Commonwealth. Delaying the bill also lacks foresight in our goals for a strong economic recovery, especially as our entrepreneurs, world-class companies and research institutions are hungry for a readied workforce in this globalized knowledge-based economy. Having already lost our first-mover advantage, thirteen states have adopted laws and policies of higher education equality, including our neighbors New York, Connecticut and Rhode Island. But this momentum also gives us hope, especially as the movement for national immigration reform continues.
MIRA expresses our deepest gratitude to the lead sponsors of this bill, Senator Sonia Chang-Diaz, Representative Denise Provost and Representative Alice Wolf, who stood as courageous champions for this bill, as well as the co-sponsoring legislators of this bill and all students, advocates and allies that stood up for higher education equality this session. It will be a bittersweet summer for some of our high school graduates, but it doesn't have to be this way for those that follow the class of 2012.
With the deadline for reporting bills out of state legislative committees fast approaching, several bills that would impact immigrants have received their hearings in recent weeks, and MIRA has provided testimony. Most notably, on February 28, MIRA testified before the Joint Committee on the Judiciary in opposition to S.B. 2061/H.B. 3919, "An Act to enhance community safety." This was a wide-ranging bill with numerous provisions that would harm immigrants and Massachusetts communities more broadly, and about which we regularly updated our members since its filing in late September 2011. MIRA worked with our members and allies to bring informative testimony to the hearing, and also mobilized community members to deliver hundreds of postcards about the bill, signed by registered voters, to legislators.
The recent Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decision Finch v. Commonwealth Health Care Connector Authority has re-established Commonwealth Care health coverage eligibility for many immigrants. If you are an immigrant who was previously enrolled in the "Bridge" program, you should have received a letter from the Connector Authority in February regarding increases in benefits, health plan options, and designation of a Primary Care Provider (PCP). Everyone in this situation should have been transferred to Commonwealth Care on March 1.
Committee hearing packed with constituents speaking out against divisive and fiscally irresponsible Senate Bill 2061
BOSTON — In the middle of a contentious State House hearing today on a bill entitled "An Act to Enhance Community Safety," Representative Carlos Henriquez asked, "Why are we making immigration the culprit in this? What can we do that addresses these issues that doesn't make immigration the boogeyman, so to speak?"
The act, SB 2061 and its counterpart House Bill 3913, were presumably introduced in response to the tragic death of a U.S. citizen caused by a drunk driver who happened to be undocumented. But at the Joint Committee on the Judiciary hearing, human rights advocates, faith leaders, immigration experts and others spoke about how the proposed legislation scapegoats immigrants and ignores the real threats to public safety, namely, drunk driving and alcohol abuse.
At 1 p.m. today, February 28, the Joint Committee on the Judiciary will hold a hearing on “An Act to Enhance Community Safety,” a bill that is not only anti-immigrant, but actually detrimental to public safety.
Senate Bill 2061 and its counterpart House Bill 3913 have been widely condemned by advocates, including faith-based organizations, poverty law attorneys, and health care providers. The bill was introduced last fall in the legislature as a political response to media uproar over the tragic death of a U.S. citizen by a drunk driver who happened to be undocumented. Instead of tackling the problems of alcohol abuse and driving under the influence, the bill imposes punitive measures on immigrant communities by focusing on matters related to federal immigration law. These measures would send painful reverberations through immigrant, mixed status and non-immigrant households alike by damaging community-police relations and our economy.
The not-so-quiet town of East Haven, Connecticut has been the subject of a media firestorm in recent weeks. The initial story broke when four East Haven police officers were arrested following a three year federal investigation into alleged racial profiling of Latinos in the area. While East Haven Police Chief Leonard Gallo was not criminally charged in the investigation he has conveniently decided to retire, a decision that will take affect today.
State of the Union addresses immigration's empty promises
In a predictable State of the Union address Tuesday night, President Obama hit all the standard political talking points; homeland security, education, jobs and the economy. He did however take a moment to discuss higher education and the challenges that young immigrants face when attempting to advance their education. Obama laid out the facts once again: “Let’s also remember that hundreds of thousands of talented, hardworking students in this country face another challenge: the fact that they aren’t yet American citizens. Many were brought here as small children, are American through and through, yet they live every day with the threat of deportation.” While the DREAM Act would have gone a long way in solving this problem the approval and implementation has yet to be seen, leaving hundreds of thousands of young immigrants in limbo when it comes to educational advancement.
El gobierno anunció hoy la extencion del Estatus de Protección Temporal (TPS, por sus siglas en inglés) de los ciudadanos elegibles de El Salvador por un período adicional de 18 meses, comenzando el 10 de marzo de 2012 y terminando el 9 de septiembre de 2013. Reinscripción esta abierto hasta el 12 de marzo de 2012. El gobierno aceptará solicitudes presentadas desde el 9 de enero de 2012 hasta el 12 de marzo de 2012.
