From Adriana Cadena <[email protected]>
Subject Health Care Rights, Deep Canvassing, Farm Bill, Summer Reads, and More
Date June 5, 2024 8:21 PM
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[[link removed]]
Dear John,
The Biden Administration executive action announced yesterday [[link removed]] was a direct attack on lawful immigration, as embodied by the right under law to seek asylum in the United States. Like the Trump Muslim ban and African ban, the Biden asylum ban excludes people based on where they’re from. We stand in solidarity with African Communities Together [[link removed]] , UnidosUS [[link removed]] , and the many PIF partners who have already denounced this unjust and dangerous attack.
Also in this week’s newsletter:
*
June
11:
What
New
Health
Care
Rights
Policies
Mean
for
People
with
Limited
English
Proficiency
[#1]
*
Deep
Canvassing
Toolkit
First
Look
June
13
[#2]
*
Take
Action:
Farm
Bill
Nutrition
Provisions
[#3]
*
Research:
Focus
on
Language
Access
[#4]
*
Community
Education:
Engaging
Materials
[#5]
*
Summer
Read:
Everyone
Who
Is
Gone
Is
Here
[#6]
June 11: What New Health Care Rights Policies Mean for People with Limited English Proficiency
The National Immigration Law Center (NILC) and the Protecting Immigrant Families (PIF) coalition invite you to a webinar on language access civil rights in health care and the newly-finalized “Section 1557” rules. The webinar will review the scope of federal language access protections in health, how they are enforced, and how they apply to states. The webinar is June 11 at 3:00pm, and speakers include:
*
Melanie
Fontes
Rainer
,
Director,
Office
for
Civil
Rights,
U.S.
Department
of
Health
and
Human
Services
*
Gabrielle
Lessard
,
Senior
Health
Policy
Attorney,
National
Immigration
Law
Center
*
Simon
Marshall-Shah
,
Senior
Policy
Analyst,
Michigan
League
for
Public
Policy
*
Adriana
Cadena
,
Director,
Protecting
Immigrant
Families
Campaign
Register [[link removed]]
June 13: Deep Canvassing Toolkit First Look June 13
Our partners at the Tennessee Immigrant & Refugee Rights Coalition (TIRRC) are preparing to release an exciting resource: Transformative Conversations: Nine Insights from Deep Canvassing to Foster Empathy, Counter Bias, & Strengthen Democracy . The toolkit is informed by six years of organizing campaigns and conversations with local voters, and it shares key insights to tap the power of deep canvassing. TIRRC has used this two-way conversational technique – based on story sharing, empathy, and connection – to move people away from bias and towards better understanding of complex policy issues and support for social progress. We encourage you to join the TIRRC team Thursday, June 13, at 3:00 PM CT for a first look at the toolkit , including a panel discussion exploring why applying the insights and learnings from deep canvassing in spaces beyond door knocking has the possibility to change conversations, counter bias, and strengthen democracy in our country.
Register [[link removed]]
Take Action: Farm Bill Nutrition Provisions
PIF member Coalition on Human Needs is coordinating an organizational sign-on letter urging Congress to protect and strengthen the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). The U.S. House Agriculture Committee’s draft “Farm Bill” makes billions in cuts to SNAP, a lifeline for more than 40 million people, including millions in immigrant families. The bill urges lawmakers in both chambers of Congress to insist on responsible SNAP funding and addresses other concerns with the committee draft.
Read and Sign On [[link removed]]
Research: F ocus on Language Access
Join us on our June 12 Research Working Group call, where we will be hearing from Joana Ramos of Washington State Coalition for Language Access (WASCLA) [[link removed]] , a multidisciplinary education and advocacy organization which works to eliminate language barriers to essential services for individuals whose primary language is not English, including immigrants, refugees, and individuals who are Deaf or Hard-of-Hearing. Joana leads WASCLA's policy work on health and human services, as well as in the PreK-12 education sector. She will present on WASCLA’s approach to community-focused research, and how they have utilized research for addressing the impacts of language service gaps.
Monthly working group check-in calls are open to PIF active member organizations: To join the PIF coalition and the Research Working Group, visit the PIF website [[link removed]] .
Community Education: Engaging Materials
Join PIF’s Community Education Working Group call on Tuesday, May 11, at 3pm ET for a conversation about strategic approaches to designing educational campaign materials. We’ll touch on audience and objectives, language, layout, and beyond to ensure your community outreach materials have greater impact!
Monthly working group check-in calls are open to PIF active member organizations: To join the PIF coalition and the Community Education Working Group, visit the PIF website [[link removed]] .
Summer Read: Everyone Who Is Gone Is Here
The extraordinary Everyone Who Is Gone Is Here: The United States, Central America, and the Making of a Crisis , by Jonathan Blitzer, chronicles US foreign policy toward Central America and immigration policy for migrants from El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala through the lives of several individuals, from the late 1970s to today. Using the Refugee Act of 1980 as a starting point, Blitzer tells an epic, human story of migration, trauma, policy, and raw politics through wars, presidential administrations, and waves of immigration. In addition to touching on issues PIF addresses, such as the creation of the 5-year bar, the book also highlights the incredible work of PIF active members Make the Road New York and La Clinica del Pueblo, as well as many esteemed advocates and activists who have partnered with us over the years.
Read the New York Times Review [[link removed]]
Active Member Only Toolkits
Become a PIF Active Member [[link removed]]

Protecting Immigrant Families Coalition
P.O. Box 34573
Washington, DC 20043
United States
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