New York, District 10

New York, District 10

Remembering Ellis Island's Busiest Day: How Has Immigration Changed Since 1907?

Remembering Ellis Island’s Busiest Day: How Has Immigration Changed Since 1907?

On April 17, 1907, thousands upon thousands of immigrants filed through Ellis Island’s Registry Room, a room no larger than two high school basketball courts. By the day’s end, they had set the record for the number of immigrants processed in a single day—11,747. By… Read More

DRC Immigrant Finds His Faith and a Path to Helping Other Immigrants

DRC Immigrant Finds His Faith and a Path to Helping Other Immigrants

César M’nyampara was a mining-industry lawyer in the Democratic Republic of Congo, but when his father, a political activist, was murdered in 2003, he decided to find a safer place for his family. In 2011, M’nyampara, his pregnant wife, and their four children came to Illinois on diversity visas. There,… Read More

Arkansas Online: Report details immigrants' effect on economy of central Arkansas

Arkansas Online: Report details immigrants’ effect on economy of central Arkansas

Immigrants living in central Arkansas paid more than $240 million in local, state and federal taxes in 2016, according to a report published Tuesday that details the economic effect of foreign-born residents. Roughly 29,000 immigrants — more than one-third from Mexico — lived in the six-county metropolitan area that year,… Read More

Without DACA, Gifted Linguist Faces Deportation Instead of Law School

Without DACA, Gifted Linguist Faces Deportation Instead of Law School

When Santiago Tobar Potes was brought to the United States at age 3, he spoke only Spanish. Now 20 and a student at Columbia University, he has become a gifted linguist, teaching himself English, French, Portuguese, Italian, Haitian Creole, and Chinese, and now working on Arabic and Russian. He wants… Read More

Kansas City Star: Chamber report proves immigrants’ contribution

Kansas City Star: Chamber report proves immigrants’ contribution

Ricardo Quinones was six months old when his family left Mexico for the United States. Today, he uses his college degree in psychology as a “behavioral implementer” — focusing on the well-being and care of his clients, who suffer from intense behavioral issues. The overall goal is to decrease unwanted… Read More

Young Advocate: Without Newcomers, Economy Would Not Survive

Young Advocate: Without Newcomers, Economy Would Not Survive

After his father’s cancer returned in 2016, Phillip Germain, then 18 and a college student, took care of him. It was a pivotal moment for the young man. His father’s care was contingent upon affordable healthcare through the Affordable Care Act, Medicare, and Social Security. In short: public policy decisions… Read More

Local Kentucky Leaders Respond to the Announcement of the SUCCEED Act, Calls on State Delegation to Support DREAMers in the Economy

Local Kentucky Leaders Respond to the Announcement of the SUCCEED Act, Calls on State Delegation to Support DREAMers in the Economy

Louisville, KY — Today, local Kentucky leaders responded to the announcement of the SUCCEED Act, legislation that addresses the uncertain future of DREAMers following the announcement to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) Program. The group urged the Kentucky Congressional Delegation to support reforms that allow… Read More

DACA Recipient Fears Losing Ability to Support Her Younger Siblings

DACA Recipient Fears Losing Ability to Support Her Younger Siblings

When Blanca Carrillo Salmeron, an undocumented immigrant in Norman, Oklahoma, received protection from deportation under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) order in 2013, a year after it was signed, the whole family breathed a sigh of relief. Carrillo Salmeron’s parents were also undocumented, and they had four other… Read More

Economic Impact of Dreamers is Tremendous, Says South Carolina Lawyer

Economic Impact of Dreamers is Tremendous, Says South Carolina Lawyer

In 1980, when Marie-Louise Ramsdale was 10 years old, her father, a metallurgical engineer, got a job in America and relocated the family from Britain to South Carolina. Ramsdale suffered from culture shock — “I had no idea what pizza was,” she says — but settled in quickly, thriving at… Read More

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