The Forum Daily, formerly Noorani's Notes
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THE FORUM DAILY
Conservatives need not panic about the pending Title 42 lift, writes
Allegra Love, founder of the Santa Fe Dreamers Project, for an op-ed in
the Ohio Capital Journal
.Â
Title 42 was never about public health, she points out, but "was an
opportunity for the Trump administration to close the southern border
off to migrants after the big, beautiful wall failed to materialize ...
Through one emergency health order, Trump and Miller found a workaround
to screening, to due process, and to legal protection that international
and domestic law mandates when someone is arrested at a border."Â
Given that the border was effectively closed off to asylum-seekers
throughout the pandemic, an increase in migrants at the border makes
logical sense, she adds. Maintaining Title 42 does not: "Keeping Title
42 in place is the exact wrong thing to do if our country wants to see
manageable numbers at the southern border ... We have to deal with the
massive group of people created by the closure and create a humane plan
to deal with normal migrant flows as that bottleneck clears."Â
The Department of Homeland Security has developed a plan
for the border. For more on how to really address the border, see our
new list of 42 Border Solutions That Are Not Title 42
.Â
Welcome toâ¯Monday's editionâ¯of The Forum Daily. I'm Joanna
Taylor, Senior Communications Manager at the Forum. If you have a story
to share from your own community, please sendâ¯itâ¯to me at
[email protected] . Â
REFUGEE RESPONSE - Some key reads this morning: The Biden
administration is planning to deny entry to several Afghans currently
waiting at a U.S. Army base in Kosovo due to potential security
concerns, Hans Nichols and Jonathan Swan report for Axios
.
(As a reminder, cases like these are an indication of our vetting
procedure's effectiveness.) For The Atlantic
,
Russell Berman speaks to the double standards facing Afghan refugees
compared to Ukrainian refugees. And for The Wall Street Journal
,
Natalia Ojewska and Ian Lovett report on Ukrainian refugees returning
home in "droves" amid a Russian retreat. And as our friends at World
Relief remind us, welcoming all global refugees as our neighbors is the
right thing to do. If you're near Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania,
tomorrow, register for their event
. Â
WIN-WIN - Kate Santich of The Orlando Sentinel
tells the story of Mohebullah Zyarmal, a former translator for the U.S.
Marine Corps, who fled Afghanistan with his family. Known as M.Z., he is
now one of 90 Afghan refugees sponsored by - and working for - the
faith-based nonprofit Westminster Communities of Florida. "By the end of
the first year, they'll have a job reference, a credit reference, a
landlord reference and education," said Mary Klein, the company's
chief human resources officer. "It's a win for us, because we were in
need of [employees]. And it's a win for the Afghans because they
really get a jumpstart on rebuilding their lives in the United States."
Passing the Afghan Adjustment Act
would also help more allies like M.Z. find security, as Texas Chapter
Coordinator Stacie Smith writes for Afghan Report
. Â
Today's local stories:Â Â
* A network of community leaders at Chapman University are supporting
five of their Afghan alumni as they transition into their new lives and
careers in Orange, California. (Dennis Arp, Chapman University
)Â
* Holland, Michigan-based nonprofit Lighthouse Immigrant Advocates is
launching a new program, The New Americans Legal Clinic, "to help more
than 300 Afghan refugees in West Michigan secure asylum." (Byron
Tollefson, WOOD
)Â
CAM PROGRAM - When former President Donald Trump cancelled the Central
American Minors Refugee and Parole Program
(CAM) in 2017, it left families hoping to reunite with their loved ones
in limbo, reports Giulia McDonnell Nieto del Rio of Documented
.
For the past five years, Ana Celina Funes has been trying to reunite
with her son who is still in El Salvador. (His CAM application was
incomplete when the program shut down.) Although the Biden
administration reinstated the CAM program in mid-March of 2021, data
"shows that the program is still struggling to stay afloat," due to lack
of government funding and support. Only 229 applicants have been granted
refugee status since the program restarted, compared to 1,334 in the
entire 2016 calendar year. Meanwhile the Global Sisters Report
's
Frontera series illustrates how border communities, non-profit staff,
and volunteers are helping vulnerable migrants get back on their
feet. Â
**'WE NEED SOME DIVERSITY HERE'** - For years, Greene County,
Iowa, has been declining in population despite officials' efforts to
retain residents, reports Maria Sacchetti of The Washington Post
.
Now, the mostly white and Republican community is turning to Latinos -
"the largest minority group in Iowa, and one of the fastest growing" -
to stop the rapid decline. Business leaders and organizers have created
a "diversity project," dubbed "Nueva Vida en Greene County," or New Life
in Greene County, to help advertise Greene County to Latino workers.
"I'm glad that it's getting done," said Marilyn Schwartzkopf, 73,
who has been practicing her Spanish to help newcomers at the county's
historical museum in Jefferson. "We need some diversity here. We're
all too old and White."Â
Thanks for reading,Â
JoannaÂ
**P.S.**Â Happy graduation season! Almost eight years after coming to
the U.S., Fabiola Jenson and Fartun Hirsi, from Rwanda and Somalia
respectively, have achieved their dreams of graduating from nursing
school at the University of Southern Maine, reports Roger McCord of The
Main Monitor
.
The Monitor previously profiled
Jenson and Hirsi as part of its "Chasing Maine" series.Â
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