COVID-19

COVID-19

USCIS Holds Drive-Thru Naturalization Ceremonies to Work Through COVID-19 Backlog

USCIS Holds Drive-Thru Naturalization Ceremonies to Work Through COVID-19 Backlog

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) expects, by the end of July, to have worked through nearly the entire backlog of naturalization oath ceremonies put on hold in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The agency is now providing new ways to take the oath, including drive-thru naturalization ceremonies. The… Read More

Trump Labels Asylum Seekers as National Security Threat in Expanded Asylum Bar

Trump Labels Asylum Seekers as National Security Threat in Expanded Asylum Bar

Even as President Trump downplays the threat of COVID-19, the Trump administration is using the pandemic as a pretext to bar more people from asylum in the United States. While the proposal is being tied to the coronavirus right now, this asylum bar could remain in place long after… 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

ICE Says International Students Must Take Classes in Person or Leave the Country

ICE Says International Students Must Take Classes in Person or Leave the Country

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to surge across the United States, many universities have chosen to temporarily move to online-only classes to protect public health. However, new guidance from the Trump administration will not allow international students to stay in the United States if their classes move online this fall. Read More

Federal Court Strikes Down Trump’s Asylum Transit Ban in Momentous Victory

Federal Court Strikes Down Trump’s Asylum Transit Ban in Momentous Victory

On June 30, a federal judge in the District of Columbia struck down the Trump administration’s asylum transit ban, ending a sweeping policy that had shut down asylum for most people entering the United States at the southern border. The court’s decisive action could not have come soon enough,… Read More

Read the 2020 'Celebrate America' Creative Writing Contest Winning Entry

Read the 2020 ‘Celebrate America’ Creative Writing Contest Winning Entry

Mother’s Words, a poem by 5th grade student Maddie Posch of Washington D.C., is this year’s winner of the ‘Celebrate America’ Creative Writing Contest. Maddie’s winning entry explores the importance of passing on immigration stories between a mother and child. Mother’s Words By Maddie Posch I sit down slowly, And… Read More

Supreme Court Limits Court Oversight for Fast-Track Deportations  

Supreme Court Limits Court Oversight for Fast-Track Deportations  

The Supreme Court ruled on June 25 that certain asylum seekers forced through a fast-track deportation process at the U.S. border, called “expedited removal,” cannot challenge their deportations in federal court. Foreclosing a critical way to challenge these error-prone deportation orders leaves people even more vulnerable to abuse by immigration… Read More

The Supreme Court Gave DACA a Lifeline. Now Trump and Congress Need to Create a Path to Citizenship for Dreamers.  

The Supreme Court Gave DACA a Lifeline. Now Trump and Congress Need to Create a Path to Citizenship for Dreamers.  

The Supreme Court issued its long-anticipated decision in DHS v. Regents of the University of California—the case challenging the administration’s attempt to dismantle the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) initiative. The Court ruled on June 18 that the administration did not adequately explain its decision to end… Read More

DACA Made It Possible For Me to Fight Against COVID-19. The Supreme Court May Soon Make That Impossible.

DACA Made It Possible For Me to Fight Against COVID-19. The Supreme Court May Soon Make That Impossible.

My name is Sonia Martinez. I am a Certified Nursing Assistant working to help treat patients with COVID-19 at University of Colorado Hospital in Aurora, Colorado. I am also one of the 650,000 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals recipients in the United States today. According to… Read More

Immigrant IT Workers Play Critical Role in the Coronavirus Pandemic's Virtual Economy 

Immigrant IT Workers Play Critical Role in the Coronavirus Pandemic’s Virtual Economy 

The coronavirus pandemic has radically altered the U.S. workforce. Many people have lost their jobs, while others have had to continue to go to work despite the serious health risks. Some sectors within the U.S. economy, however, have been able to shift toward working remotely. And immigrants working in the information technology sector have once again proven essential throughout this transition. Data compiled by New American Economy highlights… Read More

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