President Biden announced a border policy plan yesterday that would expand pathways for some migrants, if eligible, and restrict access to asylum for others, reports a team at The New York Times.
Among the proposed plans, some of which we previewed yesterday, are to accept up to 30,000 migrants monthly from Cuba, Nicaragua, and Haiti via an expanded humanitarian parole program that models the Venezuelan program. The caveat: maintaining Title 42 for asylum seekers from those same countries who may cross the border unlawfully. (More on the extension of Title 42 and next steps here, and a great op-ed on the right to asylum by Karen Musalo of the Center for Gender and Refugee Studies for the Los Angeles Times.)
To be eligible for the expanded program, migrants would have to "afford a plane ticket, get a sponsor, download an app, pass a background check and meet other requirements," the Times writes. The administration also plans to triple refugee resettlement from the Western Hemisphere to 20,000.
Yet, the biggest takeaway from the announcement was the urgent need for Congress to step in: "We again call on Congress to legislate, to provide sufficient resources to manage the increased encounters at the border and to fix the immigration system everyone agrees is terribly broken," said Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, in a media briefing. "Absent congressional action, we will do what we can using the authorities and resources available to us to manage the border in a safe, orderly and humane manner."
Some human rights groups, including faith groups, have concerns about Biden’s border security and enforcement plans, reports Jeff Brumley of Baptist News Global. Krish O’Mara Vignarajah, president and CEO of Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service, and Melissa Crow, director of litigation at the Center for Gender & Refugee Studies, speak to Here & Now’s Deepa Fernandes to break down the proposed plan, offering questions to consider.
Jennie Murray, our President and CEO at The Forum, also weighed in on some of the positives in the President’s plan — and our concerns.
And ICYMI, here are some helpful resources which provide more context, understanding and solutions around the situation at the southern border:
Welcome to Friday’s edition of The Forum Daily. I’m Becka Wall, the Forum’s digital communications VP, and the great Forum Daily team also includes Dynahlee Padilla-Vasquez and Katie Lutz. If you have a story to share from your own community, please send it to me at [email protected].
DOMESTIC EXTREMISM — A Department of Homeland Security intelligence assessment warns that extreme violence targeting migrants on the southern border could increase in response to the pending Title 42 lift, reports Luke Barr of ABC News. "The tactics discussed are consistent with [domestic violent extremist] messaging and include firearms attacks, the placement of land mines along migration routes, and luring migrants into trailers
to poison them with gas, according to DHS reporting," the Dec. 23 bulletin states. "Since at least 2018, DVEs responsible for mass casualty attacks tied to immigration grievances have prioritized soft targets perceived as being densely populated by immigrants or facilitating migration to the United States." CNN’s Priscilla Alvarez first reported the news. For more on how to combat extremist threats and rhetoric, see our collection of resources about the Great Replacement Theory and how to combat it in your community.
KABUL TO AUSTIN — After going through a harrowing journey to flee Afghanistan and reach the U.S., Siawash Osian and his family landed in Texas last January. They benefited from the herculean efforts of local nonprofits, including the Refugee Services of Texas’ Austin office, which resettled 964 Afghans from October 2021 through September 2022, reports Benton Graham of The Austin Chronicle. "There is an Afghan community, of course, but the life system
here in the U.S. is totally different," Osian said. Osian, who worked in IT as part of the U.S. Special Forces unit, applied for both asylum and a special immigrant visa, as recommended by the office. He now awaits a final decision — or a more certain path forward from potential passage of the Afghan Adjustment Act.
Local welcome:
- Next month, the International Institute in St. Louis will open its new Afghan Chamber of Commerce to "help established and new businesses thrive." (Laura Barczewski, KSDK)
- A national community art project called Welcome Blanket, 60 quilts (and counting) with welcome notes, is helping to embrace new immigrants to Winooski, Vermont. Housed at the Heritage Winooski Mill Museum through February, new arrivals will be invited to choose a blanket to take home. (Auditi Guha, VTDigger)
IMMIGRANT YOUTH CENTER — Youth center activist Bushra Alabsi has been teaching immigrant teens at a local mosque in Tenderloin, California, for the past two decades. The center serves as an alternative to being on the streets, Alabsi tells Mallory Moench of the San Francisco Chronicle. "The Tenderloin is a not-so-good area, and if we have a safe, clean, nice area, even for kids as they grow up, they don’t feel like they live in such poverty because of
their environment," said Alabsi, who is now looking for a permanent space for the center. Known as the Tenderloin Family House, the center is one of 31 proposed projects up for a vote, with the aim of getting part of the $3.5 million related to the city’s community action plan for the neighborhood, notes Moench.
THREE KINGS DAY — Today is Día de Los Reyes (known elsewhere as Epiphany), celebrated in Mexico and other countries, to honor the Three Wise Men who were guided by a star to Bethlehem. The holiday is often celebrated with a rosca de reyes, or king cake, as The Washington Post’s Betty Chavarria deliciously describes for us. The "cake is more than a sweet holiday treat. Each part symbolizes part of the story of the Magi … For us, rosca de reyes means one last slice of
Christmas magic." The Three Kings and their journey makes me think of this beautiful poem by my friend Laura Hornby of We Welcome, which makes the connection between caravans in the bible and what we see at the U.S.-Mexico border.
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