Monday, August 23, 2021

Population Growth


 

People of Color Made Up All of the United States’ Population Growth in the Last 10 Years


Demographers have known for decades that the United States is well on its way to becoming a predominantly multi-racial and multi-ethnic society. New data from the 2020 Census reveals how rapidly that transformation is taking place.


Increasing numbers of people identify racially as either Asian or multi-racial. Growing numbers of people identify ethnically as Latino (which can include people of any race). Meanwhile, the number who identify as non-Latino white-only has begun to decrease for the first time in U.S. history.


These trends should serve as a warning to politicians who rely on racist and xenophobic rhetoric to exploit the unease that many native-born, non-Latino whites feel about these demographic changes. Politicians who encourage fear of immigrants and minorities are playing to a shrinking base. Meanwhile, the number of Americans who come from minority or immigrant backgrounds continues to grow.


(The Census Bureau cautions that some of the differences between the results of the 2010 census and the 2020 census reflect improvements that were made in how race and ethnicity were measured in the 2020 census.)


The new data, as summarized by the Census Bureau and analyzed by The Brookings Institution, highlights several important demographic trends.

Monday, August 16, 2021

Ending Immigration Detention?


 

New Illinois Law Expected to Go Furthest Toward Ending Immigration Detention in the US



A new Illinois law limiting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention is expected to effectively end detention in the state by next year. The law goes further than those that have limited detention in other states.


On August 2, Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker signed SB 667, known as the Illinois Way Forward Act. The law prohibits local governments from signing new contracts with ICE and requires existing contracts to end by 2022. All three detention centers in Illinois are county jails that contract beds to ICE, which will no longer be allowed. The law still permits ICE to operate its own detention centers, but it does not currently have any in the state.


ICE uses several types of contracts to detain the tens of thousands of people in its custody around the country. Most people in ICE detention are held in facilities owned by private prison companies or local governments. ICE owns a small number of facilities directly.


Other states have taken steps to end detention but will do so on a longer timeline. In 2019, California’s AB 32 similarly ordered the phasing out of private detention. However, ICE quickly secured long-term renewals of four contracts before the bill went into effect, allowing these facilities to continue operating through 2034.

Monday, August 9, 2021

Pull Over?


Texas’ Order to Pull Over Vehicles Carrying Migrants Likely Violates the Constitution, Judge Rules



A federal judge on Tuesday dealt an important blow to Texas Governor Greg Abbott’s flawed plan to stop migrants from entering and traveling through Texas.


Governor Abbott issued an executive order on July 28 that prohibited anyone other than law enforcement officials from transporting people who had been detained by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP). The order also authorized Texas Department of Public Safety officers to stop anyone they believed was violating this order and impound their vehicle.


The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) swiftly sued the State of Texas to stop the order from taking effect. U.S. District Judge Kathleen Cardone’s decision granting a temporary restraining order (TRO) states that the DOJ is likely to win the lawsuit that seeks to revoke Gov. Abbott’s executive order because it conflicts with federal law and violates the U.S. Constitution by regulating the operations of the federal government. The TRO, which stops Texas from implementing the order while the lawsuit continues, will be in effect at least until August 13. The parties will then go back to court for a more extensive presentation of the facts. But this decision does not bode well for Gov. Abbott.


In its complaint, the DOJ explains exactly how Gov. Abbott’s order conflicts with the federal government’s operations at the U.S.-Mexico border.


Congress has given the federal government—not the states—the power to oversee the administration of federal immigration laws. This power includes the authority to arrest, detain, remove—and when needed—transport noncitizens.


Monday, August 2, 2021

In-Depth Look at ICE


 

Government Documents Provide In-Depth Look at ICE’s Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic


In response to a lawsuit and a successful motion for a preliminary injunction, the Council and the Immigrant Legal Defense (ILD) secured multiple productions of government documents that illustrate ICE’s chaotic response to COVID-19 in ICE detention. The documents also detail widespread changes ICE was forced to implement following a court order in Fraihat v. ICE, a case challenging detention conditions and lack of medical treatment for individuals in ICE jails around the country. Following an injunction in Fraihat, ICE was forced to address various deficiencies in its response to COVID-19.  

The records obtained through FOIA demonstrate ICE’s confusion in its early response to the COVID-19 outbreak. For example, correspondence from the Committee on Appropriations to DHS officials demonstrates the Committee’s uncertainty and concern about ICE’s slow response at the outset of the pandemic. The documents also provide insight into the agency’s decision to continue removing individuals from the United States during the pandemic.


Also among the documents is pre-pandemic agency guidance regarding outbreaks of infectious diseases, records depicting ICE’s early response to COVID-19, and the pervasive impact of the pandemic on ICE operations and staff.


Finally, records reveal ICE’s expansive overhaul of its own COVID-19 response following the court’s injunction in Fraihat v. ICE. In Fraihat, a federal judge issued an order on April 20, 2020 requiring ICE to establish a process to identify and track people in ICE custody with relevant “Risk Factors”; conduct custody redeterminations for any detained people with Risk Factors; update internal ICE protocols for responding to the pandemic; and ensure that the order be implemented at every detention facility in the United States, among other actions.