Economic Impact

Economic Impact

How Immigration Can Offset the U.S. Labor Shortage and Rising Inflation

How Immigration Can Offset the U.S. Labor Shortage and Rising Inflation

The U. S. inflation rate reached a 40-year high in June and slightly eased to 8.5% in July, continuing to put pressure on the budgets of American families. Disruptions to the supply chain during the COVID-19 pandemic have led to price hikes around the world, with the war… Read More

Welcoming and Inclusive State Policies: A Midyear Review of State Legislative Sessions in 2022

Welcoming and Inclusive State Policies: A Midyear Review of State Legislative Sessions in 2022

As immigration bills languish in Congress, state legislatures continue to pave the way in welcoming immigrants and refugees in 2022. With the majority of the 46 state legislatures that convened this year having adjourned, many states—once again—used the legislative process to pass bills that make their communities more inclusive for… Read More

Hispanic Americans Are Helping Put the Rio Grande Valley on the Map

Hispanic Americans Are Helping Put the Rio Grande Valley on the Map

Located on the U.S.-Mexico border at the southern tip of Texas lies the Rio Grande Valley, or as Texans call it “the Valley” or “RGV.” While the RGV–made up of Cameron, Hidalgo, Starr, and Willacy counties–most recently made national news during Texas Governor… Read More

Local Communities Take the Lead in Welcoming All

Local Communities Take the Lead in Welcoming All

Local communities across the country have long experienced the positive effects of growing immigrant and refugee communities.  As a result, many local governments, chambers of commerce, and nonprofits have been thinking proactively about how to create an environment that sends a message of inclusion and social cohesion, maximizes the contributions… Read More

U.S. Census: A Closer Look at the Fastest Growing Minority Group in the United States

U.S. Census: A Closer Look at the Fastest Growing Minority Group in the United States

Data from the 2020 U.S. Census Bureau show that there are approximately 20.7 million Asian and Pacific Islanders in the United States—comprising 6.2 % of the U.S. population—that make up the fastest growing minority group in the United States. In the last decade, the U.S. Asian population grew by… Read More

Federal Court Restores Access to Work Permits for Many Asylum Seekers

Federal Court Restores Access to Work Permits for Many Asylum Seekers

A federal court issued a decision on February 7 invalidating two Trump-era regulations that restricted access to work permits for asylum seekers. In her decision, Judge Beryl Howell of the District Court for the District of Columbia found that Chad Wolf had not been lawfully serving as Acting Secretary… Read More

President Biden Ends Part of Trump’s Ban on Legal Immigration

President Biden Ends Part of Trump’s Ban on Legal Immigration

President Biden has ended a 10-month ban on immigrant visas—the COVID-19 immigrant visa ban. The Trump administration issued the ban in April 2020 in the name of “protecting” American jobs during the economic crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. The real purpose was not to provide any meaningful… Read More

What Are the Benefits of the J-1 Visa?

What Are the Benefits of the J-1 Visa?

Over the past year, sweeping orders have banned many non-immigrant visa holders from entering the United States. The COVID-19 pandemic gave many former Trump administration officials the opportunity to restrict immigration based on fears surrounding the spread of the coronavirus and U.S. unemployment and immigration. The extended… Read More

How Trump’s COVID-19 Immigration Ban Has Impacted Family-Based Immigration

How Trump’s COVID-19 Immigration Ban Has Impacted Family-Based Immigration

The Trump administration is successfully using the COVID-19 pandemic as a pretext to alter the U.S. system of legal immigration. New government data makes clear that these changes will significantly increase employment-based immigration at the expense of people in the family categories—and without any involvement by Congress. On March 20,… Read More

Congress Calls to Decrease ICE Detention as COVID-19 Continues to Spread

Congress Calls to Decrease ICE Detention as COVID-19 Continues to Spread

The House Appropriations Subcommittee on Homeland Security introduced their proposed budget for Fiscal Year 2021 (beginning October 1, 2020) this week. The budget would have significant implications for U.S Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention facilities—current hotspots of the coronavirus pandemic. In a reversal of previous budget requests, this… Read More

Make a contribution

Make a direct impact on the lives of immigrants.

logoimg