August 29, President Barack Obama 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW Washington, DC Dear President Obama:

Similar documents
We, the undersigned organizations, would like to express our support for the DREAM Act

July 23, RE: Support for the Help Separated Families Act of Dear Member of Congress:

AILA InfoNet Doc. No (Posted 11/19/14)

December 18, President Barack Obama The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. Washington, DC Dear Mr. President,

RE: Support for H.R. 1215, the Immigration Oversight and Fairness Act of 2009

Dear Chairman Goodlatte and Ranking Member Conyers:

President Barack H. Obama The White House Washington, DC. July 3, Dear President Obama:

AILA Doc. No (Posted 6/16/16)

December 31, President Barack Obama The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Washington, DC Dear President Obama,

Further, we ask that you consider the following steps to help ensure that refugees have access to counsel and are able to have their day in court:

#WeChooseWelcome for refugees of all faiths and nations

The Honorable Patrick J. Leahy, Chairman Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs

Re: Women s Health in Immigration Reform and the Five Year Bar to Affordable Health Care

Matthew Miller, Bureau of Legislative Research

PERMISSIBILITY OF ELECTRONIC VOTING IN THE UNITED STATES. Member Electronic Vote/ . Alabama No No Yes No. Alaska No No No No

2016 Voter Registration Deadlines by State

Re: Request for Field Visit from the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention

Center for Women Policy Studies Civil Liberties and Public Policy Program The Children's Partnership Coalition of Labor Union Women Coalition on

Case 3:15-md CRB Document 4700 Filed 01/29/18 Page 1 of 5

ACCESS TO STATE GOVERNMENT 1. Web Pages for State Laws, State Rules and State Departments of Health

Reception and Placement of Refugees in the United States

State Trial Courts with Incidental Appellate Jurisdiction, 2010

The remaining legislative bodies have guides that help determine bill assignments. Table shows the criteria used to refer bills.

Should Politicians Choose Their Voters? League of Women Voters of MI Education Fund

Co-Sponsor and Support Swift Passage of the Raise the Wage Act

National State Law Survey: Statute of Limitations 1

2015 ANNUAL OUTCOME GOAL PLAN (WITH FY 2014 OUTCOMES) Prepared in compliance with Government Performance and Results Act

STATE LAWS SUMMARY: CHILD LABOR CERTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS BY STATE

2008 Electoral Vote Preliminary Preview

Campaign Finance E-Filing Systems by State WHAT IS REQUIRED? WHO MUST E-FILE? Candidates (Annually, Monthly, Weekly, Daily).

Publication of Temporary Protected Status Determinations

Intake 1 Total Requests Received 4

Update Manager s amendments to VAWA (H.R. 4970) do not fix critical problems. H.R eliminates protections for battered immigrants; harms victims.

Intake 1 Total Requests Received 4

Fiscal Year (September 30, 2018) Requests by Intake and Case Status Intake 1 Case Review 6 Period

The Victim Rights Law Center thanks Catherine Cambridge for her research assistance.

Notice N HCFB-1. March 25, Subject: FEDERAL-AID HIGHWAY PROGRAM OBLIGATION AUTHORITY FISCAL YEAR (FY) Classification Code

For jurisdictions that reject for punctuation errors, is the rejection based on a policy decision or due to statutory provisions?

State Complaint Information

Rhoads Online State Appointment Rules Handy Guide

ACTION: Notice announcing addresses for summons and complaints. SUMMARY: Our Office of the General Counsel (OGC) is responsible for processing

TELEPHONE; STATISTICAL INFORMATION; PRISONS AND PRISONERS; LITIGATION; CORRECTIONS; DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION ISSUES

2008 Changes to the Constitution of International Union UNITED STEELWORKERS

Election of Worksheet #1 - Candidates and Parties. Abraham Lincoln. Stephen A. Douglas. John C. Breckinridge. John Bell

Registered Agents. Question by: Kristyne Tanaka. Date: 27 October 2010

MEMORANDUM JUDGES SERVING AS ARBITRATORS AND MEDIATORS

THE PROCESS TO RENEW A JUDGMENT SHOULD BEGIN 6-8 MONTHS PRIOR TO THE DEADLINE

April 6, Dear Senator,

Delegates: Understanding the numbers and the rules

POLITICAL CONTRIBUTIONS. OUT-OF- STATE DONORS. INITIATIVE STATUTE.

12B,C: Voting Power and Apportionment

Federal Rate of Return. FY 2019 Update Texas Department of Transportation - Federal Affairs

June 17, Dear Representative:

April 29, Dear Attorney General Lynch:

Components of Population Change by State

Map of the Foreign Born Population of the United States, 1900

7-45. Electronic Access to Legislative Documents. Legislative Documents

NOTICE TO MEMBERS No January 2, 2018

Incarcerated America Human Rights Watch Backgrounder April 2003

National Latino Peace Officers Association

ADVANCEMENT, JURISDICTION-BY-JURISDICTION

Class Actions and the Refund of Unconstitutional Taxes. Revenue Laws Study Committee Trina Griffin, Research Division April 2, 2008

8. Public Information

The 2,000 Mile Wall in Search of a Purpose: Since 2007 Visa Overstays have Outnumbered Undocumented Border Crossers by a Half Million

New Census Estimates Show Slight Changes For Congressional Apportionment Now, But Point to Larger Changes by 2020

Nominating Committee Policy

Immigration Policy Brief August 2006

Countries Of The World: The United States

America s Deficient Bridges: A State-by-State Comparison

State-by-State Chart of HIV-Specific Laws and Prosecutorial Tools

If you have questions, please or call

Re: 155 Organizations Nationwide Support the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (H.R. 2654/ S. 1512). Co-Sponsor Today!

The Honorable Mitch McConnell Majority Leader U.S. Senate 317 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510

Complying with Electric Cooperative State Statutes

How Many Illegal Aliens Currently Live in the United States?

NORTH CAROLINA GENERAL ASSEMBLY Legislative Services Office

RE: Rethinking mandatory detention and deportation in light of the Department of Justice s Smart on Crime initiative

American Government. Workbook

Eligibility for Membership. Membership shall be open to individuals and agencies interested in the goals and objectives of the Organization.

Elder Financial Abuse and State Mandatory Reporting Laws for Financial Institutions Prepared by CUNA s State Government Affairs

The Electoral College And

Limitations on Contributions to Political Committees

Bylaws of the. Student Membership

Department of Legislative Services Maryland General Assembly 2010 Session

May 6, Dear Member of Congress:

Decision Analyst Economic Index United States Census Divisions April 2017

Women in Federal and State-level Judgeships

2006 Assessment of Travel Patterns by Canadians and Americans. Project Summary

2008 Voter Turnout Brief

Affordable Care Act: A strategy for effective implementation

Table of Contents. Part one: List of Charts

INSTITUTE of PUBLIC POLICY

New data from the Census Bureau show that the nation s immigrant population (legal and illegal), also

Parties and Elections. Selections from Chapters 11 & 12

BYLAWS. Mission Providing visionary leadership in nursing education to improve the health and wellbeing of our communities.

Democratic Convention *Saturday 1 March 2008 *Monday 25 August - Thursday 28 August District of Columbia Non-binding Primary

FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION [NOTICE ] Price Index Adjustments for Contribution and Expenditure Limitations and

Franklin D. Roosevelt. Pertaining to the. Campaign of 1928

ASSOCIATES OF VIETNAM VETERANS OF AMERICA, INC. BYLAWS (A Nonprofit Corporation)

Redistricting in Michigan

Transcription:

August 29, 2016 President Barack Obama 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW Washington, DC 20500 Dear President Obama: We, the undersigned national, state, and local organizations and faith communities, write in advance of the September 20 th U.S.-led Leaders Summit on Refugees to thank you for convening global leaders, and to urge you to demonstrate global leadership by making bold new commitments to refugee protection, assistance, and solutions, including increased U.S. resettlement. Faced with dramatic refugee crises at home and abroad, our nation is at a critical moment in its history and confronted by a question that strikes at the heart of our national identity whether we will rise up to the challenges of our time, or give in to fear, division, and retreat. Never before has the world witnessed such a dramatic scale of human displacement and suffering. Sixty-five million men, women, and children have lost their homes, and twentyone million of those have been forced to flee their countries. While the images of overloaded boats in the Mediterranean and desperate crowds sleeping in train stations in Europe are more likely to catch the world s attention, the vast majority of refugee families are struggling to survive in countries neighboring their own beleaguered host countries with their own political, economic, and security challenges. Many of the countries bearing the most responsibilities to host refugees are at a breaking point, and some could further descend into unrest. In the face of this reality, we commend you for your leadership to convene global heads of state to collectively commit to increasing humanitarian contributions by 30%, and urge your Administration to do all that it can to increase the U.S. contribution. While humanitarian assistance is the principal lifeline for most refugees, unfortunately, for some it is simply insufficient to ensure their health, safety, dignity or family unity. For refugees with particularly complex personal circumstances, risks and vulnerabilities, resettlement is often the only viable option and may indeed be life-saving. The United States has historically been a beacon of freedom and hope for the world s most oppressed and persecuted, and our communities have proudly welcomed these families as part of the fabric that make this nation great, but we need to do much more. UNHCR has identified over one million refugees who are in need of resettlement today, yet it will take almost a decade to achieve this target given current commitments. We urge you to increase the number of refugees, at a level commensurate with global need, who are offered the lifesaving opportunity to create a new life here in the United States. Specifically, we call upon you to provide solutions for 200,000 refugees in FY17 through resettlement and alternative admissions pathways to the United States at least 140,000 of which should be admitted through the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program. A commitment to admit more refugees must be matched with a level of resettlement funding which ensures that refugees have access to the services

and support that they need to integrate quickly and successfully upon arrival in welcoming American communities. Finally, we urge you to demonstrate American leadership by improving the domestic and foreign policy response to the refugee crisis in our own region. Hundreds of thousands of Central Americans the majority of them women and children continue to be forced to flee their homes each year, often due to gang-related violence, displacing internally and across borders in an attempt to find safety in the United States and other countries in the region. While we applaud the limited but very meaningful steps the Administration has recently taken, such as the announced expansion of resettlement opportunities for Central American refugees, many core aspects of the U.S. s enforcement-centric response to this crisis continue to be mis-aligned with our national values and risk returning refugees to the very danger they have fled. We urge you to amend the current enforcement policies which have the effect of detaining and deporting Central Americans seeking protection in this country, and ensure that all Central Americans adults, families and unaccompanied children have a meaningful opportunity to seek asylum and other applicable forms of relief under U.S. law. We also urge you to utilize your legal authority to protect those Central Americans in the U.S. who cannot return because of the widespread violence, such as by designating El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala for Temporary Protected Status. And finally, we urge you to ensure that U.S. support to the Mexican government in response to the regional crisis be focused on increasing capacity to screen for protection needs and adjudicate asylum claims consistent with international law, rather than enforcement and deterrence methods that should not be used against asylum seekers attempting to seek protection at our borders or anywhere in the region. Only by advancing these specific solutions to protect those displaced by violence and persecution will the United States be able to lead by example when we are on a global stage this September. As you build your Administration s final legacy, we thank you for highlighting the need to address the suffering of refugees. We look forward to working with you to making these commitments a reality. Sincerely, National Organizations & Faith Communities AFL-CIO African American Ministers In Action Alianza Americas American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA)

American Jewish Committee s Jacob Blaustein Institute for the Advancement of Human Rights American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee Anti-Defamation League Bethany Christian Services Boat People SOS, Inc. CASA Catholic Relief Services Center for Applied Linguistics Center for Victims of Torture Church World Service CODEPINK for Peace Columban Center for Advocacy and Outreach Disciples Center for Public Witness Disciples Home Missions The Episcopal Church Ethiopian Community Development Council, Inc. Fig Tree Revolution Franciscan Action Network Friends Committee on National Legislation Global Ministries of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) and United Church of Christ Guatemala Human Rights Commission HealthRight International Heartland Alliance International HIAS, Global Jewish Organization for Refugees Human Rights First

International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP) International Rescue Committee Jesuit Conference of Canada and the United States Jesuit Refugee Service/USA Jewish Council for Public Affairs (JCPA) Just Foreign Policy Khmer Health Advocates Kids in Need of Defense (KIND) Latin America Working Group (LAWG) Leadership Conference of Women Religious Liberia Medical Mission Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service (LIRS) Lutheran World Relief Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns MoveOn.org National Council of Churches, USA National Council of Jewish Women National Immigrant Justice Center National Religious Campaign Against Torture National Center for Lesbian Rights NETWORK Lobby No One Left Behind Nonviolence International-USA Office of Social Justice, Christian Reformed Church in North America Oxfam America

Pax Christi USA Peace Action Presbyterian Church (USA) Rabbinical Assembly Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association Reconstructionist Rabbinical College/Jewish Reconstructionist Communities Refugee Alliance Network Refugee and Immigration Ministries, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) The Refugee Center Online Refugee Solidarity Network RefugePoint Sister Parish, Inc. Sisters of Mercy of the Americas' Institute Justice Team Southeast Asia Resource Action Center (SEARAC) Unitarian Universalist Service Committee United Church of Christ U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI) United States Conference of Catholic Bishops/Migration and Refugee Services Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) We Belong Together Week of Compassion, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) Win Without War Women's Refugee Commission

State and Local Organizations & Faith Communities ACCESS (Michigan) Advocates for Refugees in California (California) Arkansas United Community Coalition (Arkansas) The Bellevue/NYU Program for Survivors of Torture (New York) Bhutanese Association of St. Louis (Missouri) Bhutanese Community of Oregon (Oregon) Boston Center for Refugee Health & Human Rights (Massachusetts) College of Southern Idaho Refugee Programs (Idaho) Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, Central States Synod (Kansas & Missouri) Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (Delaware-Maryland Synod) Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, Florida-Bahamas Synod (Florida) Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, Gulf Coast Synod (Texas & Louisiana) Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, Northwest Washington Synod (Washington) Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, South Carolina Synod (South Carolina) Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, South Central Synod (Wisconsin) Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, Southeastern Synod (Tennessee, Georgia, Mississippi, Alabama) English Learning Center (Minnesota) Family & Children's Association (New York) Gulf Coast Jewish Family & Community Services (Florida) International Institute of Los Angeles (California) Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization (IRCO) (Oregon) Interfaith Partnership for Refugee Resettlement (Connecticut) Interfaith Refugee Ministry Wilmington (North Carolina) International Center of Kentucky (Kentucky)

International Institute of Akron (Ohio) International Institute of Buffalo (New York) International Institute of St. Louis (Missouri) International Service Center (Pennsylvania) Jewish Child & Family Services (Illinois) Jewish Family & Community Services East Bay (California) Jewish Family Service of Seattle (Washington) Jewish Family Services of Silicon Valley (California) Just Peace Circles, Inc. (Maryland) Karen Organization of San Diego (California) Kino Border Initiative (Arizona) Lutheran Church of Our Redeemer (California) Lutheran Community Services Northwest (Washington) Lutheran Family Services Rocky Mountains (Colorado & New Mexico) Make the Road New York (New York) Maryland Welcomes Refugees (Maryland) Massachusetts Peace Action (Massachusetts) Mosaic Family Services (Texas) New York Immigration Coalition (New York) OneAmerica (Washington) Raleigh Immigrant Community, Inc. (North Carolina) Refugee Services of Texas (Texas) Rutland Welcomes (Vermont) Samaritas (Michigan) Sandy Spring Friends (Quakers) Peace Committee (Maryland)

Sister Parish, Faith Lutheran Church (North Dakota) Somali Bantu Community of Greater Houston (SBCGH) (Texas) South Sudan Center of America (Nevada) Spring Institute for Intercultural Learning (Colorado) St. Thomas Lutheran Church (Indiana) St. Stephen's Episcopal Church (Florida) Survivors of Torture, International (California) US Together, Inc. (Ohio) Utah Health and Human Rights (Utah) World Relief Fox Valley (Wisconsin) Youth Co-Op, Inc. (Florida)