Blog moderated by Michael Ryvin - a licensed immigration attorney in San Francisco.
Showing posts with label Special Reports; Immigration Enforcement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Special Reports; Immigration Enforcement. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Saturday, August 20, 2011
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
Tony and Janina To Be Reunited!
Last year, I posted a video trailer for Janina’s American Wedding, a feature length documentary that gets to the heart of the broken, red tape ridden U.S. immigration system. After 18 years in America, Tony and Janina Wasilewski’s family is torn apart when Janina is deported back to Poland, taking their 6 year old son Brian with her. Set on the backdrop of the Chicago political scene, and featuring Illinois Congressman Luis Gutierrez at the heart of the immigration reform movement, this film follows the Wasilewski’s 3-year struggle to be reunited, as their Senator Barack Obama rises to the Presidency. With a fresh perspective on the immigration conversation, this film tells the untold human rights story of Post-9/11, that every undocumented immigrant in America faces today, with the power to open the conversation for change.
"Tony & Janina's American Wedding" Trailer from Ruth Leitman on Vimeo.
Recently, The New York Times reported that Janina is on her way home!
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/08/us/08return.html
"Tony & Janina's American Wedding" Trailer from Ruth Leitman on Vimeo.
Recently, The New York Times reported that Janina is on her way home!
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/08/us/08return.html
A Polish woman will step off an airplane in Chicago on Monday afternoon with a legal visa in her hand, coming back to live in the United States four years after her deportation sundered her family, in a rare case of the return of an immigrant who was expelled.
The woman, Janina Wasilewski, was deported in 2007 after living for 18 years in the Chicago suburbs. Several applications she had filed to become a legal resident became hopelessly tangled in the immigration courts and were finally denied. She left behind her husband, Tony, also a Polish immigrant, but with his agreement she took their son, Brian, an American citizen, who was 6.
The Wasilewski family became one of the nation’s most visible examples of the impact of deportation, just as the pace of removals has accelerated under the Obama administration, to nearly 800,000 over the last two years. Images of the scene when Mrs. Wasilewski left from O’Hare Airport in June 2007 were circulated widely, with her husband gripping her and their son and weeping as he begged them not to cry.
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Deeper into the Shadows: The Unintended Consequences of Immigration Worksite Enforcement
by Jeffrey Kaye via Immigration Policy Center
When President Obama delivered his State of the Union speech last month, he repeated a theme that’s been a constant in his references to immigration reform: “I am prepared to work with Republicans and Democrats to protect our borders, enforce our laws, and address the millions of undocumented workers who are now living in the shadows,” he said, pausing for applause. The phrase I’ve emphasized is one that has resonated for Obama in the past. Bringing workers “out of the shadows” and showing concern for immigrants living “in the shadows” has been a regular refrain in Obama’s immigration lexicon. But intentions and rhetoric don’t appear to match policy. Current immigration-enforcement strategies are backfiring and, contrary to the President’s stated goals, are forcing more people into the shadows. As a result, underground economies and communities are growing, not only harming workers (many of whom have been here for many years and are settled members of our society and labor force), but also their families and the public at large.Link: http://www.immigrationpolicy.org/special-reports/deeper-shadows
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