In the States Roundup for May 8
Here's a look at some of the key battles in the states over the past week.
Here's a look at some of the key battles in the states over the past week.
It was announced over the weekend the bipartisan Senate "Gang of Eight" came to an agreement in principle on a major aspect of creating a commonsense immigration process that benefits all workers.
This agreement includes a new kind of worker visa program called the W-Visa, which will work for everyone, not just employers.
Read five things you need to know about this new employer-based visa after the jump.
Neidi Dominguez came to the United States at the age of nine with her mother and younger sister. In 2008, she graduated with honors from the University of California, Santa Cruz. She has been an advocate and organizer for DREAMers and helped lead efforts to pass the federal DREAM Act. Recently, she served as a strategic campaign coordinator for the CLEAN Carwash Campaign .
The Colorado House of Representatives passed a bill on Friday that would allow DREAMer immigrant students to pay in-state tuition at state colleges and universities. The bill now goes to Gov. John Hickenlooper (D) to be signed into law, something he has indicated he will do . Only three Republicans voted for the bill.
In Miami Gardens, Fla., last night union leaders, immigration activists and elected officials called for comprehensive immigration reformāincluding a path to citizenship for the nationās 11 million aspiring citizensāin another in the series of actions that are part of the AFL-CIOās immigration reform campaign .
Here's a look at some of the key battles in the states over the past week.
Putting the nationās 11 million aspiring citizens on a path to citizenship is notāas many Republican House lawmakers have characterizedāthe āextremeā option for immigration reform , San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro told a House Judiciary Committee hearing today.
Putting them on a path to citizenship, thatās the best option.
A road map to citizenship is now a real possibility for 11 million aspiring citizens, thanks to immigration reform blueprints from President Obama and a bipartisan group of senators .
But DREAMer Rafael Lopez reminds us that it will take real hard work and persistence to make citizenship a reality for the millions of aspiring Americans. Check out Lopez's thoughts in the YouTube video in the post.
To the lyrics of African American spirituals and freedom songs like āGuide My Feetā and āAināt Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me āRound,ā a group made up of DREAMers, their families, clergy and other people of faith in Washington, D.C., earlier today launched the nationwide Campaign for Citizenship to call on Congress to create a road map to citizenship for the countryās 11 million aspiring Americans.
The AFL-CIO and Americaās union movement, along with a broad coalition of other groups, is mounting a new campaign to build a common-sense immigration process that includes a road map to citizenship and one that guarantees immigrant workers the same workplace rights and protections all workers deserve.
We know that immigration reform can be a controversial issue among our union members and all workers. But immigration reform with a path to citizenship and workplace rights doesnāt just benefit aspiring citizens and their families, it's good for all workers. Here are 10 reasons why.