The Trump administration is ramping up eminent domain efforts for wall construction along the southern border, despite stay-at-home orders sweeping the country.
Nick Fouriezos reports for OZY that the federal government has filed 26 new eminent domain cases this year, including 16 since the beginning of March. “‘They are trying to take advantage of the pandemic, when lawyers are not going to be as willing to take cases and many people are sheltering in places,’ says Ricky Garza, a staff attorney at the Texas Civil Rights Project, whose lawyers are fighting some of the administration’s eminent domain cases in court.”
Welcome to Friday’s edition of Noorani’s Notes. Have a story you’d like us to include? Email me at [email protected].
DENIED – In more great reporting for The Dallas Morning News, Dianne Solis and María Méndez profile a handful of families to highlight how U.S. citizens with undocumented family members are being denied economic relief from Washington because of the mixed status of their households — even if they have paid their taxes. “The CARES Act excludes unauthorized immigrants and most U.S. citizens or legal immigrant spouses who file taxes jointly with unauthorized immigrants or immigrants without a Social Security number … This includes families where there are U.S. citizen children of unauthorized immigrants.” Meanwhile, Gerard Matthews at the Arkansas Nonprofit News Network looks into the state’s efforts to protect immigrants. Mireya Reith, founding executive director of Arkansas United, points out that the immigrant workforce has “the least flexibility when it comes to social distancing or missing work to either get tested or self-isolate. Our economy and state’s health cannot rebound if we do not address the health of these immigrant workers.”
MORATORIUM – Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions released a statement yesterday calling for a “moratorium on all employment-based immigration until the U.S. returns to pre-coronavirus crisis unemployment levels,” reports Adam Shaw at Fox News. While Sessions cites the latest unemployment numbers, he ignores the reality that immigrants of various skill levels have demonstrated their critical importance to the U.S. economy before and after the pandemic — and they’ll be critical to a robust economic recovery. This will be the leading edge of the opposition’s argument in the months and years to come.
PATTERN AND PRACTICE – Two companies are suing U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) for frequent denials of H-1B visas for foreign workers, reports Genevieve Douglas for Bloomberg Law. “The agency has ‘a pattern and practice’ of misinterpreting H-1B requirements so that the position of market research analyst doesn’t satisfy criteria meant to determine whether a position qualifies as a specialty occupation, MadKudu Inc. and Quick Fitting Inc. said in a lawsuit filed Thursday in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.”
ONLY IN AMERICA – Our latest episode of “Only in America” finishes off our agriculture series, “Growing a Better System,” with a conversation with Soren Bjorn, president of Driscoll’s of the Americas. An immigrant and a recently naturalized U.S. citizen, Soren talks about the essential work of immigrant farmworkers during the coronavirus pandemic, the importance of food security and the need for a modernized visa process.
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