From USCCB/MRS/JFI <[email protected]>
Subject JFI Week in Review 8/5-8/9/19
Date August 9, 2019 4:04 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

JFI Week in Review 8/5-8/9/19
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Justice for Immigrants Colleagues,
Please see below for the latest updates from JFI.
In Wake of Horrific, Hate Filled Violence in El Paso, USCCB Chairs Call for Change
in Language and Rhetoric of All Americans
On August 8, 2019, Bishop Joe S. Vásquez of Austin, chairman of the Committee on
Migration, Bishop Frank J. Dewane, Bishop of Venice, FL, chairman of the Committee
on Domestic Social Development, and Bishop Shelton J. Fabre, Bishop of Houma-Thibodaux,
chairman of the Ad Hoc Committee Against Racism, issued a statement expressing their
deep concern about the racism and xenophobia that apparently motivated this weekend's
massacre in El Paso. The bishops lamented the tragic loss of life, which "demonstrates
that hate-filled rhetoric and ideas can become the motivation for some to commit
acts of violence." They further called on "all to act swiftly to stop using hate-filled
language that demeans and divides us and motivates some to such horrific violence."
And, instead, asked "our leaders and all Americans to work to unite us as a great,
diverse, and welcoming people." Read the full statement [[link removed]].
USCCB Urges Senators to Oppose S. 1494
On July 31, 2019, Bishop Joe S. Vasquez, Chair of USCCB's Committee on Migration,
renewed the Committee's call to Senators to oppose the "Secure and Protect Act of
2019" (S. 1494), because it would greatly erode existing safeguards for asylum seekers
and unaccompanied children seeking protection in the United States. To learn more,
please see the S. 1494 text [[link removed]],
the USCCB Letter to the Senate Judiciary [[link removed]]
(7/31/2019), and our chart [[link removed]]
summarizing the bill's key provisions.
Asylum Update
Safe Third Country Agreement: On July 27, 2019, the Trump administration signed
an agreement [[link removed]]
with the government of Guatemala. The yet-to-be-implemented agreement would allow
the United States to return arriving asylum seekers who transited through Guatemala
(and who are not nationals of the country) to Guatemala in order to seek protection
there rather than in the U.S. Questions have already been raised with the agreements
legality, particularly as Guatemala's constitutional court previously ruled that
the country's president, Jimmy Morales, cannot enter into an agreement with the
United States without the approval of Guatemala's legislature.
Matter of L-E-A-: On July 29, 2019, Attorney General Barr issued Matter of L-E-A-,
apparently attempting to change an important, long-standing tenet of who qualifies
for asylum. (AG Decision [[link removed]];
Analysis by CLINIC [[link removed]],
which represented L-E-A-).This decision would apply to cases in which an asylum
seeker requests U.S. asylum on the ground of belonging to a "particular social group,"
namely his/her family. In other words, the asylum seeker's family member is being
persecuted and the asylum seeker thus fears he/she will also be persecuted. Despite
years of contrary precedent, the Attorney General declares in the decision that
most asylum seekers with such family persecution claims will not qualify for asylum
protection.
O.A. v. Trump: On August 2, 2019, the U.S. District Court of the District of Columbia
vacated the Administration's November 2018 Interim Final Regulation (IFR) that attempted
to bar from asylum anyone who enters the United States in between official ports
of entry along the U.S.-Mexican border without permission (decision [[link removed]]).
The court held the IFR to be contrary to the federal asylum statute that allows
someone to access asylum regardless of how they entered the United States.
Appropriations
On August 2, 2019, President Trump signed into law the Bipartisan Budget Act of
2019 [[link removed]],
H.R. 3877, that which raises the federal budget limits for each spending area until
9/30/2021 and suspends the federal debt ceiling until 7/31/2021. When Congress returns
from their August recess, they will have less than a month to take action on FY2020
appropriations. The House has already passed 10 of 12 FY2020 appropriation bills,
including proposed funding of $2.41 billion for Refugee and Entrant Assistance (ORR
funding) and $3.532 billion for Migration and Refugee Assistance (PRM funding).
The Senate has not introduced any spending bills yet, explaining that they were
waiting for the budget and debt issues to be resolved.
Congress and the President have three choices in September: 1) final approval and
signing of 1 to 12 appropriations bills; 2) final approval and signing of a Continuing
Resolution (CR) that would temporarily extend spending levels at FY2019 levels for
those areas that do not have final appropriation bills; and/or 3) shut down of the
areas of government activity that do not have either final bills or a CR. Reportedly
[[link removed]],
some appropriators hope that before FY2020, they will be able to at least complete
spending for three areas that constitute 70% of federal discretionary spending:
Defense; Labor, Health, and Human Services and Education; and Energy and Water Development.
Bishop Mark J. Seitz of the Diocese of El Paso and HOPE Border Institute Announce
'Border Refugee Assistance Fund' to Aid Migrants at the US-Mexico Border
On July 29, 2019 Bishop Seitz and Dylan Corbett, executive director of the HOPE
Border Institute, announced [[link removed]]
the launch of the 'Border Refugee Assistance Fund', to assist migrants stranded
at the U.S.-Mexico border. Thousands of migrants, mostly from Central America, are
currently stranded in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, across the border from El Paso, TX.
These migrants have been returned to Ciudad Juárez as a result of the Migration
Protection Protocols, commonly known as Remain in Mexico [[link removed]].
Grants from the fund will be used to support the initiatives and shelters providing
for the immediate humanitarian needs of migrants in Ciudad Juárez, the majority
of which have been organized by faith communities. You can view a video [[link removed]]
describing the work the fund will support.
More details and information on how to donate to the fund may be found at the Diocese
of El Paso's webpage [[link removed]].
Call to Action on Refugee Resettlement
As reported in the last JFI Week in Review, some in the Administration are calling
to zero out the U.S Refugee Admissions Program. We urge you to consider taking two
actions during August to help battle against this drastic and negative proposal:
1) Urge your Senators and Representative to become a co-sponsor of the Guaranteed
Refugee Admissions Ceiling Enhancement Act (GRACE Act) [[link removed]],
which would guarantee that the U.S. would resettle at least 95,000 refugees per
year to use with Congress). Please give your Senators and Representative this call
to action document USCCB has endorsed the GRACE Act.
2) Urge your organization to sign on to the RCUSA-led sign-on letter supporting
an FY2020 refugee admission of 95,000 refugees. This important letter [[link removed]]
is open to national, state, and local organizations and the deadline for sign-on
is 10am Wednesday, August 14th. To sign-on, please fill out this short form [[link removed]].
Be in touch with [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
with any questions. USCCB is considering signing onto the PD letter, and encourages
JFI members to consider signing on.
JFI Webinar: World Day for Migrants and Refugees
Please join us next week for a webinar presentation on the World Day for Migrants
and Refugees. The webinar is on Wednesday, August 14th at 2PM Eastern. There is
more information below on the webinar flyer:
Upcoming Events and Opportunities

* 8th Annual Barrio Latino Art Festival - August 10, 2019 at 1-11 PM in Toledo,
OH: The Barrio Latino Art Festival [[link removed]]
celebrates diversity, innovation, and achievement. This event features live music,
dancing, food, artwork on display, mural painting, crafts, Grito contest, jalapeño
contest, art kid's activities and many other special performances. The Barrio Latino
Art Festival Parade will kick off the festival. The parade route will start at Danny
Thomas Park and end at 1411 Broadway St, Toledo, Ohio 43609. See you there!!

* How Parental Incarceration Harms Children and What to Do about It - August 13,
2019 at 1:00 PM Eastern (English); August 20, 2019 at 1:00 PM Eastern (Spanish):
The Catholic Prison Ministries Coalition will be host of this webinar, which will
focus on the negative effects that parental incarceration has on children. The webinar
will also provide helpful tips how you can help to alleviate some of these consequences.
Visit the event website [[link removed]]
for information about how to register.

* Praying Together for Peace - August 21, 2019 at 6:30 PM in Tucson, AZ
Join Catholics and other people of faith at our next Praying Together for Peace
on Wednesday, August 21st at St. Mark's United Methodist Church, 1431 W. Magee Road,
Tucson, AZ at 6:30 pm. Contact [mailto:[email protected]] Pastor Evy McDonald for
more information.

* Invitation to Celebrate the 18th Anniversary of the National Advocacy Center of
the Sisters of Good Shepherd - September 19, 2019 at 5:30 PM in Washington, DC:
Join in celebrating the National Advocacy Center's 18th Anniversary. Gather on Thursday,
September 19th at 5:30 PM at the DC Baptist Building, a short walk from the Dupont
Metro. We will celebrate with an awesome Tae Kwon Do demonstration! Also, we will
have a poetry fest with everyone invited to share their poems. Light refreshments
will be provided. Visit the event website [[link removed]]
for more information.

* The Vatican's World Day for Migrants and Refugees - September 29, 2019: The Vatican's
World Day for Migrants and Refugees [[link removed]]
provides an opportunity to reflect on migration in the world, and the Church's response
to this issue. The theme for this year's celebration is "It is not just about migrants,"
which draws attention to the fact that migration is a multifaceted and complex problem.
In anticipation of this celebration, Pope Francis released a message on migration
[[link removed]]
that will assist in our reflections.

* Citizenship Clinics in Chicago, IL
Interested in becoming a U.S. citizen? Irish Community Services (ICS) in Chicago,
in partnership with the Illinois Department of Human Services and Illinois Coalition
for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, can help with the "New Americans Initiative."
If you are a green card holder and interested in pursuing US citizenship, call ICS'
office at 773-282-8445 for more information.
In Solidarity,
Mark Priceman
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

3211 Fourth Street, NE Washington, DC 20017
Phone: (202) 541-3064 Fax: (202) 722-8711
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Copyright © 2019 United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Forward this email
[link removed]

This email was sent to [email protected] by [email protected].

Update Profile/Email Address
[link removed]


Instant removal with SafeUnsubscribe(TM)
[link removed]


Privacy Policy:
[link removed]

Online Marketing by
Constant Contact(R)
www.constantcontact.com



USCCB | 3211 Fourth Street NE | Washington | DC | 20017
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis