- By Maya Harris,
- New America Media
- Jan 18, 2008
Editor’s Note: 2007 was a grim year for many immigrants with the
double whammy of failed comprehensive immigration reform and
increased enforcement measures across the country. What's in store
for 2008? Maya Harris is the executive director of the ACLU of
Northern California, the organization’s largest affiliate in the
country. She is the first African American and first Indian American
to hold that position. IMMIGRATION MATTERS regularly features the
views of the nation’s leading immigrant rights advocates.
SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. – First-grader Kebin Reyes, a U.S. citizen who
lives with his father in San Rafael, just over the Golden Gate
Bridge from San Francisco, missed a field trip with his class one
day last March. In the early dawn hours, armed agents from
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) stormed into the Reyes’
apartment, handcuffed Kebin’s father, and took both father and son
into custody. The terrified six-year-old was locked in a room with
his father for 10 hours, with nothing to eat but bread and water.
Kebin is one of our clients. A month after the raid, the ACLU filed
a federal lawsuit on behalf of the little boy for violation of his
Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights.
Kebin was just one of thousands of children across the country who
were traumatized by the Department of Homeland Security’s “Operation
Return to Sender” program last year, an initiative characterized not
only by racial profiling and a disregard of constitutional rights,
but by tremendous inefficiency. Though DHS chief Michael Chertoff
claims that the ongoing campaign is aimed at capturing criminals and
fugitives, less than one quarter of those arrested last year in
Northern California had criminal records.
Despite the fact that Congress was unable to agree on a major
immigration reform bill in 2007, state and local laws proliferated.
This election year is sure to bring heightened rhetoric and even
more draconian proposals. Some of these will be high-profile photo
opportunities orchestrated to benefit politicians – like more
neighborhood raids and an ever longer, stronger border fence. Others
will be more subtle, contrived in the corridors of power, but whose
influence will be felt sharply by families, students and workers.
Here are some priorities for the ACLU in the new year:
“No-Match” letters: In 2007, a civil rights lawsuit on behalf
of the AFL-CIO temporarily halted the federal government plan to
punish employers who do not fire employees whose work authorizations
are not in the Social Security database. The government has
acknowledged that the database is rife with errors, and that more
than 70 percent of the discrepancies are in records of U.S.
citizens. The court predicted that the program could cause
irreparable harm to more than 8 million workers and their employers.
Nevertheless, the government intends to reintroduce its flawed
proposal in March 2008.
REAL ID: Tucked away in a supplemental bill for the Iraq War
and Tsunami relief in 2005, the REAL ID Act turns a driver’s license
into a national identity card that everyone will need in order to
travel by plane, enter government buildings or open a bank account.
Under REAL ID, every person who applies for a driver’s license must
prove to a Department of Motor Vehicles clerk that he or she is a
U.S. citizen or legal permanent resident. This national database
will not solve the problem of illegal immigration or enhance
national security – it will, however, endanger the privacy of all
Americans. Seventeen states have registered their opposition to REAL
ID, and a measure to repeal it is now pending in Congress.
Citizenship delays: As a “national security” measure, the
government expanded its use of FBI background checks in 2007 to
include a “name check” for each applicant against every name that
appears as a reference (as a victim, witness, or other relevant
party) in an FBI investigation database. This practice, which
results in “false hits,” has caused delays for hundreds of thousands
of people throughout the country.
DREAM Act: The California Legislature passed a bill to ensure
that all California high school graduates accepted into state public
institutions of post-secondary education would be eligible for
state-sponsored financial aid, regardless of their immigration
status. Though the Governor vetoed the bill, it will be reintroduced
this year in hopes that all California kids have a chance to fulfill
their dreams of higher education.
Now for some good news. Last year, California became the first state
to enact a law prohibiting landlords from checking the immigration
status of tenants and prohibiting local governments from requiring
such checks. The bill was sponsored by apartment owners who did not
want to be put in the position of acting like Border Patrol agents.
The California law, which was signed by Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger, was in direct response to local ordinances around
the country that would ban landlords from renting to undocumented
immigrants.
People often ask me, why is the ACLU involved in immigration issues?
There are very big reasons for doing so.
The ACLU was founded during the 1920s Palmer Raids, when our
government ordered European immigrants detained and deported because
of their political views. As the U.S. Supreme Court later
established, the Bill of Rights and the Constitution apply to all
persons in this country, not just to U.S. citizens.
There are also many small reasons. Like first-grader Kebin Reyes.
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this
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