Georgia, District 13

Georgia, District 13

Coalition Letter Urging USCIS to Implement Emergency Stopgap USCIS Stabilization Act

Coalition Letter Urging USCIS to Implement Emergency Stopgap USCIS Stabilization Act

The American Immigration Council joined other organizations in urging U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services to fully implement the provisions of the Emergency Stopgap USCIS Stabilization Act, which was signed into law in October 2020. Read More

New Americans in Cedar Rapids, Iowa

New Americans in Cedar Rapids, Iowa

New research from New American Economy shows that immigrants accounted for 47.1 percent of total population growth in Cedar Rapids between 2012 and 2017. The report, New Americans in Cedar Rapids, was prepared in partnership with the City of Cedar Rapids and the Cedar Rapids Metro Economic Alliance. In… Read More

DACA-Eligible Population Contributes Almost $2.5 Billion to Key Social Service Programs

DACA-Eligible Population Contributes Almost $2.5 Billion to Key Social Service Programs

NEW YORK, NY – While Washington works to find a solution for DREAMers, New American Economy is showcasing the contributions and stories that highlight how the DACA-eligible population contributes to the U.S. economy. Already, NAE has highlighted DACA-eligible immigrant incomes and tax contributions. Today, we look at… Read More

POLITICO: Trump's DACA move resuscitates immigration reform left for dead

POLITICO: Trump’s DACA move resuscitates immigration reform left for dead

President Donald Trump, who launched his campaign with a forceful attack on immigrants, is now the man responsible for catapulting immigration reform back into contention. Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced Tuesday that the administration would rescind the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, an Obama-era executive action that protected from… Read More

Foreign-born STEM Workers in the United States

Foreign-born STEM Workers in the United States

Foreign-born workers make up a growing share of the country’s STEM workforce and are critical to the country’s innovation, and STEM workers are responsible for many of the cutting-edge ideas and technologies that create jobs and raise the living standards of U.S. households. Read More

A Lone Face of Diversity Brings Art to a Small New York Town

A Lone Face of Diversity Brings Art to a Small New York Town

In Perry, New York, where she serves as the executive director of the Arts Council for Wyoming County, Jackie Hoyt is one of the few non-white, immigrant faces. There, she makes an important contribution to the community of 41,000 by creating a diverse program that… Read More

Without Direct Path to Citizenship, Child Immigrant Struggles to Find Work

Without Direct Path to Citizenship, Child Immigrant Struggles to Find Work

As a customer service supervisor for Delta Airlines, Carlos Garcia spends his day solving problems for airline passengers. They don’t know he spent most of his life living on the outskirts of American society as an undocumented immigrant. Garcia arrived in Atlanta with his parents at age 13, and as… Read More

For One Young Woman, It Took Becoming a Crime Victim to Get a Green Card

For One Young Woman, It Took Becoming a Crime Victim to Get a Green Card

Alina Luna had the grades and the drive to attend college right after high school, but she didn’t have a Social Security Number. As an undocumented immigrant who came to Atlanta from Mexico at the age of 12, she wasn’t allowed to apply for federal financial aid without it. Luna… Read More

Nonprofit’s Director Says Immigration Policy Causing Health Care Crisis for Legal Immigrants in Utah

Nonprofit’s Director Says Immigration Policy Causing Health Care Crisis for Legal Immigrants in Utah

When Luis Garza came to the United States from Mexico as a senior in high school, his biggest struggle was navigating the country’s health care system. He was able to get a green card without much trouble—his mother was a U.S. citizen—but his lack of English fluency and… Read More

Thousands of Children Stuck in Foster Care after Parents Deported, Report Finds

Thousands of Children Stuck in Foster Care after Parents Deported, Report Finds

A report released this week reveals yet another devastating consequence of the enforcement-only approach to immigration—a startling number of children whose parents have been detained and deported are placed in foster care and face enormous barriers reuniting with their families. According to the Applied Research Center, 1 in 4 people deported in FY 2011 (nearly 100,000 people) left behind a U.S. citizen child. The report found that the odds of reuniting the families are so low that the parents “basically fall off the face of the earth when it comes to the child welfare system.” Sadly, because of the regular increase in the number of annual deportations, this number is expected to triple in the next five years. Read More

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