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Immigration See other Immigration Articles Title: Sacramento may start paying for legal defense of illegal aliens From Sacramento Bee: Sacramento leaders are poised to spend up to $300,000 to boost the citys status as a sanctuary for undocumented immigrants, even as the federal government threatens to crack down on jurisdictions providing such immigrant protections. The City Council will vote Thursday on a proposal to invest in an education and legal defense network for undocumented immigrants illegal aliens, with the money coming out of a general fund that supports most core city services. The plan under consideration would also strengthen Sacramentos status as a sanctuary city by turning into law privacy policies that prohibit city employees including police from making inquiries into immigration status. It is a modest investment, but it is a very important investment, said Mayor Darrell Steinberg. It says very clearly to our community, especially those who are affected by these unconstitutional orders, that we are going to stand with you. We have to back up our values with real action to help people who feel at risk and who may be actually at risk. Both the sanctuary city ordinance and legal defense fund were proposed by a Safe Haven Task Force formed at City Hall in February. The task force was put in place in response to executive orders by President Donald Trump calling for increased enforcement of federal immigration laws. Councilman Eric Guerra, who headed the task force, said turning the citys sanctuary stance from policy into law would put more teeth in its position and makes it relevant to the context we see today, the scapegoating of immigrants. About 49,000 Sacramento residents are not citizens, including roughly 4,100 children, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Thats about 10 percent of the citys residents. Some of them are here legally, some are not the census bureau does not ask about legal status. The new money would help fund what is being called the Sacramento Family Unity, Educations and Legal Network for Immigrants, or FUEL, a collection of local immigration attorneys, nonprofits and law schools specializing in immigration law. The group will hire up to two attorneys to provide legal assistance to an estimated 750 families each year and conduct Know Your Rights information sessions in schools, churches and other community gathering places for hundreds more. The network will likely seek grants from other nonprofit agencies to expand its financial capacity. Attorneys will be tasked with representing immigrants facing deportation and helping undocumented parents prepare for the worst by creating guardianships for children and protections for homes and other assets should they be deported, said Guerra. Guerra said Sacramento hasnt yet seen federal immigration raids, but the fear is intense in immigrant communities and what we dont want is families to be separated because that leads to bigger social issues. Blake Nordahl, a supervising attorney in the immigration clinic at the McGeorge School of Law, said the network will expand the local roster of attorneys trained in immigration law by working with lawyers whose expertise is in other fields. We have a large immigrant population in Sacramento, so hopefully this is just the beginning of being able to work together, said Nordahl, whose clinic is part of the city-funded network. I think theres a real commitment to showing respect to our neighbors and recognizing that Sacramento is based on a city of immigrants and were going to take care of our neighbors. Sacramentos vote would follow other California governments that have spent public money to aid undocumented immigrants. Santa Clara County in January voted to spend $1.5 million over two years to help defend undocumented immigrants illegal aliens facing deportation. San Francisco recently set aside $200,000 for legal aid, and Oakland has allocated $300,000 for a similar effort. A similar public-private fund that could hold up to $10 million has also been proposed for Los Angeles city and county. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Horse (#0)
Seattle, King County councils approve $1.3 million in legal aid for immigrants U.S. Constitution - Article IV, Section 4: NO BORDERS + NO LAWS = NO COUNTRY
Abolish immediately, and retro-actively if possible, this anchor baby insanity.
The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable. ~ H. L. Mencken
They must have some big bucks in Seattle. I got a letter from some lawyer in Chicago concerning a parking ticket that was 20 years old. I wrote them back and told them they were whistling in the wind because that ticket was too old for them to collect. (Past statute of limitations.) This shows how desperate they are for money in Chicago. ;) "When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
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