A Beacon of Hope for Refugee Children

Last week, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors unanimously approved $2.1 million for legal services for refugee children and families in the County who are facing deportation. It is the first county in the country to do so, although legislation to allocate $3 million from the State for this purpose is currently on Governor Brown’s desk.

By Kiran Savage-Sangwan

a child holds her face in her hands

Is This How We Treat Children?

My family and I left Iran when I was 8 years old and eventually made our way to the United States. Today there are thousands of children who have fled from some of the most dangerous places in the world and are now detained throughout the country. Some have made the treacherous journey here alone.

By Abdi Soltani

unaccompanied child

This is What Censorship Looks Like

A black canvas near Gate 18 in the Sacramento airport’s Terminal B sits in place of a billboards intended to promote healthcare access for immigrants in California. Why? The airport has refused to use the original ads, claiming that they are too political in nature.

By Abdi Soltani

Censored ads

Doing Right by the Unaccompanied Children on Our Border

There are children in cages along the U.S.-Mexico border right now. And more are showing up every day.

By ACLU of Northern California

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Sleep-Deprived + Hungry + Degraded = Fair Hearing?

While immigration detention is supposed to be “civil” detention, as opposed to incarceration as punishment for a crime, the conditions that immigrants experience are anything but civil. People detained by ICE are bused daily to immigration court wearing jumpsuits and metal handcuffs, belly chains, and leg irons in San Francisco.

By Jenny Zhao

shackled prisoners (staged at a protest in front of SF Federal Building)

California Counties Say "No" to ICE

While we await much-needed federal immigration reform, dozens of counties are refusing ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) requests to detain immigrants in local jails.

By Kiran Savage-Sangwan

Ruth Montaño

Because Immigrants’ Rights are Civil Rights

Last May Day, hundreds of Fresno residents took to the streets to ask for a path to citizenship for the 11 million people forced to live in the shadows by our broken immigration system. There was momentum in Congress for comprehensive immigration and the Senate later managed to approve a comprehensive immigration reform bill. We were all so hopeful.

By Stephanie Kamey

Stephanie Kamey selfie

VICTORY! In San Francisco, Immigration Detainees No Longer Shackled

Hard to believe, but until recently, all detained immigrants appearing in the civil immigration court in San Francisco were forced to give critical testimony while restrained by shackles and chains at the wrists, waist, and ankles. The inhumane practice was particularly problematic for asylum seekers and immigrants who had suffered from torture and domestic violence in the past—and it was unnecessary since the majority of immigrant detainees appearing in civil court proceedings are peaceful individuals.

By Jenny Zhao

shackling victory

No Phone Calls, No Justice

Audley Barrington Lyon, Jr. is currently in immigration detention while he fights deportation to Jamaica. A “U visa” is a beacon of hope for Mr. Lyon, who was an innocent bystander when he was seriously injured in shooting. A U visa—available to crime victims who cooperate with criminal investigations—would give him the opportunity to stay in the country with his U.S. citizen wife. Unfortunately, he doesn’t stand a fighting chance.

By Julia Mass and Jenny Zhao

Incommunicado