Migrant children who journey north to Tapachula, Mexico, with their parents often face barriers to education because they’re moving from shelter to shelter and have a lack of paperwork to enroll in school, reports Mikenzie Hammel of Cronkite Borderlands Project.
Cristofer, age 9, is one of them. He hasn’t been to school in more than two years, since he and his father left Honduras in search of a better life.
"Growing up, I would like a better level of education, good for him," his father, Arnol Sorto, said. "He is going to decide what he would like to study. … Like everyone, I want the best for him."
One school in the city near the Guatemalan border, La Escuela Primaria Fernando Montes de Oca Rodriguez, is supporting migrant children despite the challenges. It’s the only school that does not require documents or entrance exams for enrollment, Hammel notes.
"In this case, our school will be known as one with open arms. We do not reject," said the school’s principal, Maria Guadalupe Verdugo Escobar. "... I don’t care if your dad is an assassin, I don’t care if your mom is a radical. What I care about is you [the child]. You are the future of tomorrow."
Welcome to Wednesday’s edition of The Forum Daily. I’m Dan Gordon, the Forum’s strategic communications VP. If you have a story to share from your own community, please send it to me at [email protected].
GROCERY PRICES — New Consumer Price Index data show that overall inflation remains near a 40-year high, despite recently lower gas prices, reports Paul Davidson of USA TODAY. Rising food costs were one reason why: Grocery prices in August were up 0.7% from July and 13.5% from August 2021. Our latest poll indicates that a strong majority of Americans agree with farmers who say that immigration reforms can help lower food prices — and that more than three-quarters of Americans want reforms this year that help the nation’s farmers.
AT THE BORDER — Information technology issues and poor recordkeeping caused the Department of Homeland Security to lose track of migrants at the border, per a DHS inspector general report Tuesday, Ellen M. Gilmer of Bloomberg Law reports. The result may have been "unintended family separations and prolonged time in custody," per the report. Meanwhile, NBC News’ Julia Ainsley reports that newly arriving migrants,
primarily from Venezuela, have exceeded the Border Patrol’s and shelters’ capacity in El Paso, Texas. Following biometric screenings, those who are not a threat to public safety may be released near bus stations to continue their journeys. More than 900 such migrants have been released over the past week.
HIGH-TECH COMPETITION — In high-tech fields, the U.S. and its allies need to compete with China as "their primary strategic objective," per a new report published by bipartisan national security and tech experts, John M. Donnelly of Roll Call reports. According to the Special Competitive Studies Project’s report itself, "The U.S. government should accelerate immigration processes, increase efforts to attract international tech talent, and target visas directly to needed tech fields. Highly-skilled immigrants have a disproportionately positive impact on innovation and job creation." Leaders on the Council on National Security and Immigration have been urging a similar emphasis, including in a letter to Congress and a post on the STEM skills shortage by former DHS official Elaine Dezenski. In related news, the U.S. and Mexico plan to cooperate
on semiconductor supply chains and production of electric vehicles to compete with Asian nations, report María Verza and Christopher Sherman of the Associated Press.
FOR OUR AFGHAN ALLIES — Veterans continue to feel the burden and shame of leaving behind Afghan allies with whom they worked shoulder to shoulder, retired U.S. Navy Lt. Cmdr. Brian deLutio writes in the Bangor Daily News. As he reflects on the anniversary of 9/11, deLutio advocates for his state’s senators "to co-sponsor and help pass the Afghan Adjustment Act. The United States has a moral obligation to save our allies we left behind." Elsewhere, the first episode of the four-part "No Way Home" podcast was released Sunday by The Intercept and the Future Frontlines and Fellows program at New America. In it, Summia Tora tells the harrowing story of trying to evacuate her father from Afghanistan in August 2021 — and, at the same time, trying to save a longtime NGO worker and his family.
- Thanks to the Center for Refugee Services in San Antonio, more than 3,200 Afghan evacuees have resettled, with CRS and the community offering "housing help, job training and guidance on applying for government benefits." (Zack Briggs, KENS)
- Allies of our Afghan Allies, a local community group working with Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Boston, has helped five Afghan men and a separate family of four resettle in Gloucester, Massachusetts. (Michael Cronin, Gloucester Daily News)
UKRAINIAN SPONSORSHIP — Nearly 124,000 Americans have applied to sponsor Ukrainians, and applicants from five states — New York, Illinois, California, Washington and Florida — account for more than half of that total, reports Camilo Montoya-Galvez of CBS News. "Our children now sleep peacefully. They don’t wake up from air sirens," said Natalia Agaieva, whose family resettled in Washington. "I’m so happy to see that our kids like it here, and that they enjoy
and live a full life." The Biden administration launched the private sponsorship program, "Uniting for Ukraine," in the spring. Ten metropolitan areas are the source of 55% of sponsorship requests: New York City, Chicago, Seattle, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Sacramento, Miami, Portland, Cleveland and Detroit.
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