From Ali Noorani, National Immigration Forum <[email protected]>
Subject Nine Years
Date January 10, 2022 3:11 PM
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Monday, January 10
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NOORANI'S NOTES

 

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The dramatic drop in immigration is contributing to worker shortages,
Dante Chinni of NBC News

reports. 

Net migration into the U.S. stood at more than 1 million in 2016. Since
then it has dropped more than 75%, to 247,000 in the Census Bureau's
last fiscal year. "When you look at the kinds of jobs foreign-born
workers tend to fill, you can see some of the industries that have taken
hits in the pandemic," including service industries, natural resources
and construction, Chinni writes. And the shortage could help drive
inflation.  

And on Meet the Press
,
Chuck Todd walks through the data.  

As Bryan Walsh writes in Vox
,
"Reversing that decline should be a national priority
,
and one that, unlike increasing births, is absolutely within reach."
U.S. population growth between July 2020 and July 2021 was the lowest on
record
,
Walsh notes, primarily because of a steep decline in fertility rates -
but the nosedive in immigration rates is not helping.  

How much immigration do we need to avoid demographic upheaval? We have a
data-driven answer
.  

Welcome to Monday's edition of Noorani's Notes. If you have a
story to share from your own community, please send it to me at
[email protected] .
And a thank you to my friends and colleagues, Bri Stensrud and Matt
Soerens, for their incredibly generous comments to Baptist News
Global's

Jeff Brumley.

[link removed]

SAME OLD MPP - The Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) program, also
known as "Remain in Mexico," is up and running again at the border near
San Diego and Tijuana, Kate Morrissey reports in the San Diego
Union-Tribune

- without some of the changes the Biden administration promised. The
stories of the first two men returned to Tijuana under the restart raise
several concerns: They were not allowed to confer with attorneys,
despite promises of access to legal counsel. Their documents have
errors, and their "court notices do not indicate an address where the
immigration court can contact the men ...  a major issue in the
program's first iteration because, if hearing dates change, the court
cannot inform the people expected to show up, and people who don't
show up to immigration court can be ordered deported in their absence."
This feels like the same old (awful) MPP.

OBLIGATION, OPPORTUNITY - "I witnessed Christ there in those who
suffered and felt closer to God as I worked to serve them." These are
among the reflections of Sara Hilgenberg, minister of Family Programming
and Church Outreach at First Christian Church of San Angelo, Texas, who
volunteered to help Afghan evacuees on a military base for three weeks.
In her piece in the Odessa American
,
Hilgenberg writes that helping these new arrivals is not just a
Christian obligation but "an incredible opportunity to grow closer to
God. In countless moments during my time on the military base, I
experienced the nearness of the Lord through 'the brokenhearted' and
'crushed in spirit' (Psalm 34:18). Each day I was amazed at what I
can only describe as divine provision." 

Here are the latest stories of local welcome: 

* Veteran-led Team Rubicon helped host Afghans at Camp Atterbury in
Indiana, an effort that ended Friday. In a letter, the team thanks
residents of the Hoosier State for their hospitality and support. (The
Herald-Times
) 

* In his job with Catholic Charities of the Diocese of Green Bay, Afghan
immigrant Sayed Wardak is helping newly arrived Afghans get settled in
Wisconsin. (Sam Lucero, Catholic News Service
) 

* Gulf Coast Jewish Family and Community Services has resettled 164
Afghan refugees in the St. Petersburg, Florida, area, and expects to
help a total of 250. (Waveney Ann Moore, St. Pete Catalyst
)

* A new AmeriCorps resettlement program in Minnesota will help resettle
about 750 Afghan refugees arriving in the next few months. (Kelly Smith,
Star Tribune
)

And, a local story to track:  

* In spite of labor shortages that Afghan evacuees - who have been
thoroughly vetted - could help fill, Cambria County, Pennsylvania's,
Vision Together 2025's president was pressured to clarify "they are
not looking to bring in 'Afghan refugees,' but rather 'legally
vetted immigrants.' " (Nicole Fuschino, WJAC News
) 

[link removed]

**'PERSONIFY AND HUMANIZE'** - In part 1 of a two-part interview
for Texas Public Radio's "Fronteras,"

Norma Martinez talks to Jason De León, who is using anthropology and
archeology to understand migrants' journeys. De León, a professor at
the University of California, Los Angeles, and director of the
Undocumented Migration Project
, collects and studies
items migrants have left behind on the journey north. The goal is "to
personify and humanize migrant deaths, and explain how those deaths are
directly related to inhumane border policies," Martinez writes. De León
asks, "Why is it that the things that people's Irish ancestors or
Italian ancestors or people who were coming through Ellis Island -
those materials were valorized, while the things that undocumented folks
from Latin America were leaving behind were considered garbage?"

**NINE YEARS** - Australia's detention of tennis star Novak Djokovic
when he arrived for the Australian Open has made headlines, but
Australia's treatment of refugees generally deserves attention as
well. As Jason Scott of Bloomberg News

reports, asylum seekers describe the hotel where Djokovic is detained
"as lacking exercise equipment, poorly ventilated and susceptible to
Covid outbreaks. A sign hangs inside one window reading '9 YRS
LONG.' " Australia has made life difficult for asylum seekers for more
than two decades, including the use of an isolated island for detention.
"We all know Novak is going to get out within just a few days, but these
other poor people won't," says Sophie McNeill
, the Australia
researcher for Human Rights Watch. 

Thanks for reading, 

Ali

 

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