Sergio Olmos, CalMatters, Jan. 10, 2025 "Acres of orange fields sat unpicked in Kern County this week as word of Border Patrol raids circulated through Messenger chats and images of federal agents...
ABA Commission on Immigration "Date & Time - Jan 24, 2025 11:00 AM in Mountain Time (US and Canada) Description - Please join the ABA Commission on Immigration for a non-CLE webinar on January...
ABA Commission on Immigration "Date & Time Jan 14, 2025 11:00 AM in Mountain Time (US and Canada) Description - Please join the ABA Commission on Immigration for a non-CLE webinar on January...
Hamed Aleaziz and Miriam Jordan, New York Times, Jan. 10, 2025 (gift link) "The Biden administration on Friday issued sweeping extensions of deportation protections for hundreds of thousands of...
Stephen Yale-Loehr, Dec. 9, 2024 "The U.S. immigration system is broken. Why? Several reasons. Congress is paralyzed; it hasn’t passed major immigration reform legislation in over twenty years...
"At sunrise in Gainsville, brightly coloured taxis arrive one after another outside the gates of a chicken processing plant. It's not exactly Manhattan at rush hour but the roads of this small Georgia town, with a population approximately 35,000, are full of taxis. The thriving taxi businesses are an unexpected consequence of a tough immigration law which has been in effect in Gainsville for several years and is similar to controversial legislation passed in other southern US states. Police have the power to ask a driver about their immigration status even if they are stopped for a minor traffic violation. Many undocumented workers, fearful that a speeding ticket could turn into deportation, now use taxis for everything from commuting, to work, to grocery shopping. Supporters of the law say that legal residents have nothing to worry about and point to the fact that many illegal workers are choosing to "self-deport". But critics call it a civil rights issue and warn it stokes a climate of fear and division. Ironically, all eight of the cab companies in Gainsville are operated by Hispanics. The BBC spent a day with two "Taxistas" to get the word from the street about how their business and community has been affected." - BBC News, Mar. 7, 2012.