Oakland approves $577,000 to help Central American child migrants



Similar documents
SFILDC First Annual Activity Report January December 2015

Internship Opportunities Compiled by: Michelle Rippy May 2015

doubles in size during the summer internship season. Through research, education, and

Before the New York City Council Committees on Immigration and Courts and Legal Services Testimony -presented on September 29, 2014

THE BASICS Adoption in New York State

Presents: Unaccompanied Refugee Minors & Humanitarian Crisis at the Border: What s Going On and What Can Attorneys Do?

FY Proposed Budget June Presented by: Brendon Woods, Public Defender

LETTER TO A YOUNG PUBLIC INTEREST ATTORNEY

Backgrounder: Stipulated Removal

Is My Baby Safe? Straight Talk to Teen Parents On Child Abuse and Neglect

31 ST ANNUAL SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA PUBLIC INTEREST/PUBLIC SECTOR CAREER DAY

THE BASICS Custody and Visitation in New York State

Self-Help Guide for a Prosecutorial Discretion Request

RESTRAINING ORDERS IN MASSACHUSETTS Your rights whether you are a Plaintiff or a Defendant

The paperless office has arrived.

FOR THE PUBLIC GOOD WE TACKLE TOUGH CASES

Understanding the Criminal Bars to the Deferred Action Policy for Childhood Arrivals

Crime Hurts Everyone We Can Help

Nonprofit Organizations

Federal, State and Local GOV Agencies Where Berkeley Law Students Have Done Summer Internships. Alameda County Public Defender Oakland California

GENERAL QUESTIONS ABOUT WILLS

What happens when your child is removed from your home

Update on Recent ICE Enforcement Actions Targeting Central American Families

Sexual Assault & The Juvenile Court Process A Guide for Victims/Survivors & Their Families

Unaccompanied Children in Austin/Travis County

Adoption Foster Care Birth Parent Services

Working with the NLG to Plan Legal Support for Demonstrations

APPLICATION FOR THE PRO BONO ATTORNEY OF THE DAY IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION LAW PANEL

Lanterman Petris Short (LPS) Conservatorship

Alameda Police Department

IRC Field Visit to Texas and Arizona: Key findings & recommendations to policy makers

CURRICULUM VITAE FRANK D. RUSSO

We Can Help. Crime Hurts Everybody. California Victim Compensation Program. Helping California Crime Victims Since 1965

In partnership with The Woodlands Christian Academy SPONSORSHIP PROPOSAL

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON AT SEATTLE

court. However, without your testimony the defendant might go unpunished.

Enclosed, please find more information regarding our sponsorship levels ranging from $500 to $10,000.

FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY POLICE DEPARTMENT Chief David L. Perry

Quick Guide: SIJS & Washington State Proceedings

Completing an Adoption in Minnesota. The Rights and Responsibilities of Birth Parents, Prospective Adoptive Parents and Adoption Agencies

Experts Concerned that LA County Youth Not Always Well Served by the Juvenile Justice System

Anwyl Owen Gregory and Rachel Archer Bowen Family

Domestic Violence Victims in Virginia

Non Profit Agencies Serving Title IV E Eligible Children Youth & Families Alameda County and Contra Costa County

The Nuts & Bolts of Orders of Protection and other relief for Victims of Domestic Violence

SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF CONTRA COSTA. Mock Trial Script. The Case of a Stolen Car

Partnership Opportunities

Of Catholic Charities Atlanta or

What Teens Need to Know

Immigration Attorney Fees

THE BASICS Adoption in New York State

National District Attorneys Association Newsclips October 26, 2011

Programs for Self-Represented Litigants

Oral Testimony Before the New York City Council Immigration Committee on the State of Immigrant Services in New York City

Haynes and Boone, LLP

Maine Law Clinic & Externship Programsi

Finding lawyers for hundreds of unaccompanied immigrant minors facing removal tests the limits of pro bono resources-especially in the Central Valley.

Sergeant Inspector Antonio Flores, San Francisco Police Department Statement in Support of U-Visas, T-Visas, and VAWA Self-Petitions November 8, 2011

*I am admitted to practice law in Connecticut, Colorado and the U.S. Federal Court.

ETHICAL ISSUES IN ESTATE PLANNING FOR THE ELDERLY OR IMPAIRED CLIENT CITATION MATERIALS

10 Victims and the law 57

So You Want To Become Emancipated?

I KNOW MY RIGHTS. I WANT A LAWYER.

KEROSKY PURVES & BOGUE ATTORNEYS AT LAW

What is DOMESTIC VIOLENCE?

Assisting Immigrant Victims of Domestic Violence

Hamilton County Kids Court

Adoptions. Ohio Association of Probate Judges

Child Abuse, Child Neglect. What Parents Should Know If They Are Investigated

Domestic Violence Resource Guide for Mecklenburg County Including Information about Domestic Violence Protective Orders

A U.S. IMMIGRATION LAW FIRM. Immigration Law Overview

Pleading Guilty to a Crime That carries Severe Immigration Consequences

Your Guide to Guardianships And Conservatorships in Georgia

2014 Board of Directors Candidates Statement of Willingness

Margaret M. Hand Hartog, Baer & Hand, PC 4 Orinda Way, Suite 250 B Orinda, California mmhand@hbh.law. Telephone (925)

County Court Restraining Orders

MIGRATION, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND POVERTY

LEGAL AND IMMIGRATION SERVICES

Medical Marijuana. The Times They Are A-Changin. April 1, 2011 Hotel Nikko San Francisco. Hotel Nikko. Hotel Reservations. 222 Mason St.

How To Appeal To The Supreme Court In North Carolina

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BERKELEY SOCIAL WELFARE DOCTORAL PROGRAM 329A Tamalpais Avenue Phyllis Jeroslow

CPS Adoption Process. Texas Department of Family and Protective Services

How to Become a Probate Guardian of a Child in San Francisco

VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITY DIRECTORY FOR LAW STUDENTS AND PARALEGAL VOLUNTEERS AT DENVER METRO LEGAL SERVICES PROVIDERS

ILPA response to Inquiry into Asylum Support for Children and Young People

A Summary of Virginia s Crime Victim and Witness Rights Act

How To Help Immigrants In East Bay

I KNOW MY RIGHTS. I WANT A LAWYER.

EARLY CARE & EDUCATION LAW PROJECT WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT SMALL CLAIMS COURT

INVOLUNTARY PSYCHIATRIC TREATMENT: CALIFORNIA S 72-HOUR HOLD AND 14-DAY CERTIFICATION

Domestic Violence: Can the Legal System Help Protect Me?

Statement for Hearing On Another Surge of Illegal Immigrants Along the Southwest Border: Is this the Obama Administration s New Normal?

a threat made in school

2014 Fall Externship Offerings

ENSURING EFFECTIVE DEFENSE FOR JUVENILES

Title 15 CRIMINAL PROCEDURE -Chapter 23 ALABAMA CRIME VICTIMS Article 3 Crime Victims' Rights

FAQ s for Defense Attorneys Community-Based Domestic Violence Advocates: A Resource for Battered Women Charged with Crimes

1979 M.A. in Counseling with emphasis in Marriage, Family and Child Counseling-University of San Francisco

Pro Bono Practice. Our Commitment. Our Innovation

How To Plan For The Future

Transcription:

Contra Costa Times Oakland approves $577,000 to help Central American child migrants By Matt O'Brien mattobrien@bayareanewsgroup.com POSTED: 10/22/2014 06:24:38 AM PDT0 COMMENTS UPDATED: 8 DAYS AGO 1/5 Erick, 5, left, and his sister Ashlin, 3, no last names given, are photographed at the Oakland City Hall after the City Council held a meeting to provide free legal aid to Central American child migrants in Oakland,

Calif., on Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2014. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) A girl among a couple dozens of Central American child migrants who fled their country's violence last summer, look around during an Oakland City Council meeting at the City Hall in Oakland, Calif., on Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2014. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)

East Bay Sanctuary Covenant staff attorney Jean Yamasaki, on podium, speaks on behalf of Suyapa, second from right, her niece Ashlin, 3, and nephew Erick, 5, no last names given, as councilman Noel Gallo, left, and Oakland Mayor Jean Quan look on during a City Council meeting to provide free legal...

Central American child migrants who fled their country's violence last summer, look around during an Oakland City Council meeting at the City Hall in Oakland, Calif., on Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2014. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) See additional gallery images here.

Oakland City Councilmembers Rebecca Kaplan, left, Patricia Kernighan and Libby Schaaf listen to staff of East Bay Sanctuary Covenant during a council meeting at the City Hall in Oakland, Calif., on Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2014. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) OAKLAND -- Child migrants seeking refuge in the Bay Area after fleeing Central American violence got a boost from the Oakland City Council on Tuesday night when it voted unanimously to offer them $577,000 in legal aid. The money will pay for lawyers to defend hundreds of children and teenagers from being deported to Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras. They include a 3-year-old Honduran girl and her 5-year-old brother who crossed into the United States in June and appeared at a crowded and emotionally charged City Hall hearing last week.

"It really is a life-and-death situation," Mayor Jean Quan told City Council members at last week's Finance Committee meeting, where the measure also passed unanimously. Central American child migrants who fled their country's violence last summer, look around during an Oakland City Council meeting at the City Hall in Oakland, Calif., on Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2014. The City Council's $577,000 plan will provide free legal aid to recently arrived teen and children. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) ( RAY CHAVEZ ) Quan co-sponsored the legal aid ordinance with Councilmen Noel Gallo and Larry Reid after a coalition of community organizations asked the city and Alameda County for help. Oakland is the third U.S. city after San Francisco and New York City to pay for lawyers to defend the children. California has also committed $3 million statewide and the federal government is paying $9 million to subsidize legal defense in the cities with the largest concentrations of child migrants, including Los Angeles. Unlike in criminal courts, immigrants facing deportation have no right to a lawyer, and studies have shown that they are far more likely to be deported without an attorney representing them. Oakland's $577,000 award will go to one fiscal sponsor, Centro Legal de la Raza, a nonprofit organization based in East Oakland that has been inundated in recent months with recently arrived children and their families seeking political asylum or other forms of permanent U.S. protection. Centro Legal will use some of the money for its own lawyers and distribute the rest to other legal aid groups helping the children. More than 300 unaccompanied teenagers and children from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala have landed in Alameda County since January, most of them in Oakland, according to federal statistics that show the group as the largest in California after the more than 2,400 who came to Los Angeles County this year. Most have been placed with immediate and distant family members in Oakland and Hayward, which already have large Central American immigrant communities. The surge in

child migrants corresponds with rising gang violence and extortion in their home cities in Central America. "I just came from Guatemala to save my life," said a 16-year-old named Johan, who was among many teenagers who testified at last week's meeting that they were threatened by gangs. "If I return to my country, death awaits me." He did not identify his last name for safety reasons. "They've suffered abuse, they've suffered rape, torture," said Bianca Sierra Wolff, executive director of Centro Legal de la Raza. If they are not defended by lawyers, "they will be deported and they will die." Three-year-old Ashlin and brother Erick, 5, whose last names also were not divulged for safety reasons, crossed the border into Texas in June with their father, who was immediately deported back to Honduras. The federal government released the siblings in August to their aunt in San Leandro. "Without an attorney, how could these children possibly fare" before an immigration judge, asked Jean Yamasaki, an attorney at the Berkeley-based East Bay Sanctuary Covenant. Part of their case will involve showing a local probate court that their parents are not caring for them, allowing them to qualify for Special Immigrant Juveniles Status, which grants permanent residency to abandoned or abused children, Yamasaki said. One federal immigration judge who has hundreds of deportation cases on her San Francisco docket said the moves by Oakland and San Francisco are a big help. Having an attorney represent an immigrant makes a "tremendous difference" in navigating a case through the overburdened legal system and reaching a timely and fair conclusion on whether someone deserves political asylum or other forms of U.S. protection, Judge Dana Leigh Marks said. At the San Francisco federal immigration court where Bay Area cases are decided, the influx of children has led administrators to transform a courtroom into a waiting room with donated toys and books for kids who must appear before a judge. "There has never been funding from the government, certainly not in such large amounts, to provide legal services, or even subsidize programs," said Marks, who is also president of the National Association of Immigration Judges. "It's an outstanding first step. It's historic; it's never happened before."

Alameda County is also contemplating awarding as much as $2.5 million over two years to provide mental health counseling and other social services to the children who have experienced trauma and isolation. http://www.contracostatimes.com/contra-costa-times/ci_26773619/oakland-approves-577-000-helpcentral-american-child