October 2020 Dear Friends and Allies: This Saturday, October 3, is the 55th anniversary of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), the 1965 law that is still the basis of our immigration system. The INA is the reason I am here today. It widened the door to immigration from India, which had been largely barred between the 1920s and 1950s. It enabled my father to obtain a student visa to study at the U, to obtain a green card through his employer, and to sponsor his wife—my mother—to join him and create a home here. Until Tuesday night, we worried that the anniversary of a law that opened the doors to so many would be marred by actions that aim to restrict the full privileges of citizenship to a wealthy few. On August 3, 2020, USICS announced that, starting tomorrow, it planned to increase the fee for citizenship to nearly $1,200 and to eliminate fee waivers for virtually all applications. Tuesday night, a federal district court stopped these changes from going into effect until the legal challenge is complete. Facing the prospect of working-class families being priced out of citizenship, ILCM’s staff, volunteers, and pro bono attorneys have worked tirelessly since the August 3 announcement to advise and assist 30 clients to file naturalization applications before the changes went into effect. Thanks to the following individuals for their work on these cases to ensure that immigrants and refugees were not priced out of citizenship:
We also thank our clients for being both persistent and patient with the process and trusting us with your cases.
In solidarity, Veena Iyer ILCM Executive Director
Vote for ILCM!
We are pleased to announce that ILCM has been selected as a Community Choice SEED Finalist! SEED is a program of Seward Community Co-Op that raises funds for a different organization each month by asking customers to “round up” their purchase at the register to the next dollar. These rounded up donations can total over $10,000—that’s enough for attorneys to assist 16 Dreamers to renew their DACA status, build their careers, and support their families! Perspectives: Writers on Migration
Our upcoming author series, Perspectives: Writers on Migration will kick off on October 8 with Jia Lynn Yang, Deputy National Editor of the New York Times and author of the recently published “One Mighty and Irresistible Tide: The Epic Struggle Over American Immigration, 1924-1965.” We are thrilled to host Jia Lynn and excited that she will be joined in conversation by local writer and journalist Ibrahim Hirsi. This event coincides with the 55th anniversary of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 the same week. Get Out the New American Vote!
Introducing ILCM’s new video series “Get Out the New American Vote!” We created this video series to encourage all, but especially new, Americans to vote this November. Each video will feature a naturalized citizen sharing their first experience voting in a U.S. election. So far, we've heard about Veena’s mom's excitement to vote in her first U.S. election, and Pablo Orozco’s desire to make his voice heard. Tune in on Tuesdays to hear more voting stories from new Americans. ILCM Fall Staff Updates
This fall we are excited to welcome four new individuals to our team and celebrate three current staff members in their new positions at ILCM. We also welcome two new volunteers to our pro bono team and welcome back four volunteers to our Community Defense team, two to our communications team, and one to our Austin office.
Get Involved and Support ILCM
Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota 450 North Syndicate Street, Suite 200 St. Paul, MN 55104 (651) 641-1011 www.ilcm.org |
Unsubscribe
| Privacy Policy
|