NO! to the STRIVE Act!!!
Please read the press release below by some groups in tucson and phoenix. I had no part in the writing of this... I'm really glad it was written. I have some of my own opinions about this act, but since i don't have a lot of time to read about it and write about it, it's definitely worth it for me to share this press release which i got through myspace.
It's really sad to me that so many people think the STRIVE Act is a reasonable compromise. Incredibly sad. I wish there were more citizens who would come out in support of undocumented immigrants and their families so they wouldn't feel so alone. That's the only way i can think that this would seem reasonable to those who support it. Then again, i am ever skeptical that the democratic part has some major part in shaping the voice of many immigrants.
April 12, 2007
Contact: Coalicion de Derechos Humanos, 520.770.1373
Tucson May 1st Coalition, 520.390.1604
Unidos en Arizona, Phoenix, 623.204.4626
Millions Did Not March Last Year to Settle for the STRIVE Act
Groups Announce May 1, 2007 March and Boycott for Immigrant Rights
Press Conference: Thursday, April 12, 2007, 11:00 am
El Tiradito Shrine (Cushing and Main, next to El Minuto Cafe, Tucson)
Tucson, AZ—Coalición de Derechos Humanos, the Tucson May 1st Coalition and Unidos en Arizona join numerous human rights and immigrant rights organizations across the country in opposing the STRIVE (Security Through Regularized Immigration and a Vibrant Economy) Act of 2007 (H.R 1645), recently introduced in the U.S. Congress by Representatives Luis Gutierrez and Jeff Flake. This bill calls for a heavy increase in militarization at the border, in the interior U.S. and at worksites nationwide. The Tucson May 1st Coalition, along with allied groups nationally, is organizing a march and rally on May 1, 2007, International Workers Day, to demand an immediate end to the widespread ICE raids and deportations and to call on the U.S. Congress to go back to the drawing board to develop a new immigration proposal that does not endanger the civil, labor and human rights of immigrants and workers in the U.S.
"STRIVE is not a legalization bill, it’s a detention and deportation bill. It takes the same intensive policing tactics and sweeping criminalization inflicted primarily on border communities for the past 12 years and extends these to every corner of the U.S.," said Alexis Mazon of the Coalicion de Derechos Humanos and Tucson May 1st Coalition. "The 699 pages of the STRIVE bill actually detail how more ICE raids, mass incarcerations and deportations will be conducted, not less. STRIVE even mandates that the head of every immigrant household deport themselves," she added.
The STRIVE bill places thousands more Border Patrol, ICE agents and federal marshals in communities and worksites across the country and codifies their cooperation with local police and sheriffs. This would make immigrant communities even more vulnerable to abuse because they would not report crimes or fires if they feared detection and detention. Adding more immigration police agents and expanding jail space will lead to a dramatic rise in the numbers of immigrants arrested and imprisoned. In addition, key provisions of STRIVE exclude entire categories of immigrants from regularizing their status, including individuals who have used false social security numbers, or entered the country without documents, or have a past petty offense, amongst others. Those excluded will face mandatory arrest, imprisonment and deportation. And those who would enter without authorization or re-enter after deportation would face stiff prison sentences.
"The STRIVE proposal seeks to make the rest of the country look like Arizona—la Migra on every street corner, surveillance at every workplace and private prisons in every community," said Linda Herrera of Unidos en Arizona, based in Phoenix. "Maricopa County Sheriff Arpaio searches for any opportunity to detain migrants based on his arbitrary interpretations of the anti-smuggling laws. He is even arresting children. STRIVE will only make this situation worse for immigrants."
STRIVE also expands existing abuse-ridden temporary worker programs. "The STRIVE Act actually increases the power of U.S. corporations over all workers by allowing employers to effectively rent out workers for three years and then get rid of them, as if they were machines to be used and tossed out," said Violeta Dominguez, a member of the Coalicion de Derechos Humanos and May 1st Coalition who has organized with ex-Bracero workers to demand their wages still owed to them under the former U.S. guestworker, or Bracero, program which lasted from 1942 to 1964. "A lot of people don’t realize that there are already hundreds of thousands of workers in temporary worker programs in U.S. agriculture, timber cutting and other sectors where they endure deplorable working conditions and are prohibited from organizing unions. Our communities cannot support pushing more people into this exploitative system where they would face an even greater risk than they already do of going unpaid, suffering bodily injury and getting deported for exerting their rights on the job."
Immigrant communities, who bravely marched last year to stop both Sensenbrenner’s H.R. 4437 and the repressive Senate "compromise" bill and to call for a fair and just immigration reform, have survived a year of stepped up raids, mass deportations and anti-immigrant attacks in state and local legislatures, and will take to the streets again on May 1st to say no to the STRIVE Act and yes to civil, labor and human rights for all.
[12-page Congressional summary of the STRIVE proposal available at:
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d110:HR01645:@@@D&summ2=m&]
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Para Publicacion Inmediata
12 de abril 12 de 2007
Contactar: Coalicion de Derechos Humanos, 520.770.1373
Coalicion 1ro de Mayo de Tucson, 520.390.1604
Unidos en Arizona, Phoenix, 623.204.4626
Milliones No Marcharon El Año Pasado para Aceptar la Propuesta STRIVE
Grupos Anuncian Marcha y Boicoteo el 1ro de Mayo de 2007
para los Derechos de los Inmigrantes
Conferencia de Prensa: jueves, 12 de abril de 2007 a las 11:00 am
El Tiradito Shrine (Cushing y Main, junto al Cafe El Minuto, Tucson)
Tucson, AZ—La Coalicion de Derechos Humanos, la Coalicion 1ro de Mayo de Tucson y Unidos en Arizona se unen con numerosas organizaciones que luchan por los derechos humanos y derechos de los inmigrantes en todo el pais para oponerse al "Acta STRIVE" (Security Through Regularized Immigration and a Vibrant Economy) de 2007 (H.R. 1645), que fue presentada recientemente al Congreso de los Estados Unidos por los Representantes Luis Gutierrez y Jeff Flake. Este proyecto de ley contempla una gran incrementacion de la militarizacion en la frontera, en el interior de los EEUU y en sitios de trabajo en toda la nacion. La Coalicion 1ro de Mayo de Tucson, junto con grupos aliados al nivel nacional, esta organizando una marcha y manifestacion el 1ro de mayo de 2007, el Dia Internacional de los Trabajadores, para exigir un alto inmediato a las redadas y deportaciones de ICE, asi como tambien reclamar al Congreso Estadounidense que desarrolle una propuesta nueva de inmigracion que no ponga en peligro los derechos civiles, laborales y humanos de los inmigrantes y los trabajadores en los EEUU.
"STRIVE no es una propuesta de legalizacion, es una propuesta de detencion y deportacion. Implementa las mismas tacticas policiacas intensivas y criminalizacion amplia aplicadas principalmente en las comunidades fronterizas durante los ultimos 12 años y extiende estas mismas a todos los rincones de los EEUU," declaro Alexis Mazon de la Coalicion de Derechos Humanos y la Coalicion 1ro de Mayo de Tucson. "Las 699 paginas de la propuesta STRIVE entran en detalle de sobre como seran conducidas mas redadas de ICE, encarcelaciones masivas y deportaciones, no menos. STRIVE hasta obliga a cada jefe o jefa de familia que se deporten a si mismos," agrego ella.
El proyecto de ley STRIVE instala a miles de agentes mas de la Patrulla Fronteriza, ICE, y policias federales en comunidades y sitios de trabajo a traves de todo el pais y codifica su cooperacion con la policia local y los aguaciles. Esto haria que las comunidades inmigrantes fueran mas vulnerables a los abusos, ya que dado el temor a la deteccion y detencion no reportarian ni crimenes ni incendios. Al agregar mas agentes policias de inmigracion y ampliar las carceles habra un aumento dramatico en la cantidad de inmigrantes que son arrestados y encarcelados. Ademas, las provisiones claves de STRIVE excluyen a categorias enteras de inmigrantes de poder regularizar su estado legal, incluyendo a los individuos que han utilizado numeros de seguro social falsos, o queines hayan entrado al pais sin documentos, o quienes tengan delitos menores en sus historiales, entre otras categorias. Los que son excluidos seran expuestos al arresto obligatorio, encarcelamiento y deportacion. Y esos que entrarian sin autorizacion o volverian a entrar despues de ser deportados enfrentarian sentencias de prision severas.
"La propuesta STRIVE busca hacer que el resto del pais se parezca a Arizona—la Migra en cada esquina, vigilancia en cada sitio de trabajo y prisiones privadas en cada comunidad," declaro Linda Herrera de Unidos en Arizona, basada en Phoenix. "El Aguacil del Condado de Maricopa Joe Arpaio busca cualquier oportunidad para detener y encarcelar a inmigrantes que son victimas de su propia interpretacion arbitraria de la ley anti-coyote. Aun esta arrestando a niños. STRIVE va a empeorar esta situación para los inmigrantes," agrego.
STRIVE tambien extiende los programas de trabajadores temporales existentes en los cuales hay muchos abusos. "El Acta STRIVE aumenta el poder que las corporaciones Estadounidenses tienen sobre los trajadores al permitirles a los empleadores que efectivamente alquilen a los trabajadores por tres años y despues se deshagan de ellos, como si fueran maquinas que se pueden utilizar y despues tirar a la basura," declaro Violeta Dominguez, miembra de la Coalicion de Derechos Humanos y la Coalicion 1ro de Mayo, quien ha organizado con trabajadores ex-Braceros para exigir sus sueldos que todavia se les deben bajo el programa Estadounidense anterior de trabajadores temporales, el programa Bracero, el cual duro entre los años 1942 y 1964. "Muchas personas no se han dado cuenta de que ya estan matriculados cientos de miles de trabajadores en programas de trabajadores temporales en los EEUU, en los sectores de la agricultura y corte de madera, entre otros, donde son expuestos a terribles condiciones de trabajo y donde se les prohibe organizar sindicatos. Nuestras comunidades no pueden apoyar a algo que mandaria a mas trabajadores a arriesgarse bajo un sistema explotador en el cual enfrentaran aun mas riesgos de lo que ya enfrentan al no ser pagados, sufrir lesiones corporales y al ser deportados por exigir sus derechos en el trabajo."
Las comunidades inmigrantes, que marcharon tan valientemente el año pasado para parar la propuesta H.R. 4437 del Congresista Sensenbrenner y la propuesta represiva "pactada" en el Senado asi como tambien para exigir una reforma justa y digna, han sobrevivido un año de redadas intensificadas, deportaciones masivas y ataques anti-inmigrantes en las legislaturas estatales y locales, saldran a las calles de nuevo el 1ro de Mayo para decir no a la propuesta STRIVE y si a los derechos civiles, laborales y humanos para todas y todos.
[Un resumen escrito por el Congreso de 12 paginas de la propuesta STRIVE:
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d110:HR01645:@@@D&summ2=m&]
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Fact sheet on the STRIVE proposal below -
Additional specific concerns about the STRIVE proposal include, but are not limited to:
The STRIVE Act proposes an extensive expansion of border militarization. Further militarization will continue to increase the number of migrant deaths, already tolled at more than 4,000 since 1994. Migrants who are not eligible for the limited visa program under STRIVE and who are being dislocated from their countries of origin by NAFTA, CAFTA and other U.S. economic policies, will continue risking their lives by attempting to cross the border, only to be funneled into increasingly remote and treacherous desert areas.
STRIVE expands militarization from border areas to the interior U.S. and would thereby intensify the existing human rights crisis in border and non-border immigrant communities, where people of color are routinely subject to violations of their civil, labor and human rights.
STRIVE will increase profits for the now multi-billion-dollar human smuggling industry, which will be able to extort higher fees for the ever riskier journey northward since STRIVE calls for a massive expansion of Border Patrol, technological surveillance and border walls.
STRIVE indefinitely delays the implementation of desperately needed legalization until the "interior enforcement," "employer verification" and "border security" pieces are put in place, which will likely take several years.
STRIVE tears families apart by requiring the heads of immigrant households to leave the country. Those who have to leave will be forced to stay out for an indefinite period and charged prohibitive fees to apply for a visa to return. The feeble "path to citizenship" STRIVE offers could take two decades if an applicant is able to satisfy excessive criteria.
STRIVE criminalizes immigrants by imposing stiff criminal penalties and prison sentences on millions of undocumented immigrants. It expands the 1996 immigration laws to both criminalize those who entered without documents and increase the number of offenses that are subject to mandatory incarceration and deportation.
STRIVE’s extensive policing provisions will increase the unjustified harassment, racial profiling and arrest rates of communities of color by: (1) Allowing local police and sheriffs to act as immigration agents, (2) Dramatically expanding the presence of Border Patrol, National Guard troops, ICE agents, Customs agents and federal marshals in communities across the U.S., and (3) Intensifying the policing of the workplace.
STRIVE increases the number of "temporary" workers, who will be subject to slave-like working conditions and deported for speaking out, despite the legal protections on paper, rather than creating sufficient avenues for legal permanent residency and basic labor protections.
STRIVE calls for heightened surveillance and more punitive treatment of all workers in the U.S. by placing them in a massive "employment verification" computer database. This will allow the tracking of work history and increase discrimination in employment. STRIVE expands employer sanctions, which employers use to fire workers who organize or protest poor working conditions.
STRIVE expands the use of expedited deportation, which provides no due process protections, such as access to an immigration lawyer or a hearing before an immigration judge.
STRIVE rewards notorious private prison corporations and military contractors like Haliburton, Corrections Corporation of America, Wackenhut, Boeing, Raytheon and Lockheed Martin, by calling for new contracts to build 20 new immigrant prisons, more border walls and barriers, unmanned aerial surveillance drones and radar towers, biometric scanning devices, black hawk helicopters, computerized tracking systems, lethal weapons and tasers and other militarized technologies to invade the privacy of all people in the U.S. and violate civil liberties on an unprecedented scale.
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