Skip to Content

Programs:

Legalization

The Immigration Fight Heads to Pennsylvania

Published on Wed, Oct 12, 2011

It appears as if Pennsylvania is the next state to enter into the fray of reforming their state’s immigration laws. Last week, the State Government Committee approved the Professional Licensees Illegal Employment Act. If the bill becomes law, it would penalize anyone that hires undocumented workers by revoking their professional licenses from the Bureau of Occupational and Professional Affairs. This Bureau controls the professional licensing of over 30 licensing boards for various occupations including doctors, nurses, and funeral directors.

The Pennsylvania bill has wide support from Pennsylvania Republicans who believe that employers who hire illegal immigrants are not penalized at all. They believe that illegal immigrants are taking vital jobs in a time where the country is facing increasingly high unemployment rates. Opposition to the bill is widespread, with critics citing the bill’s continued failure to set out a clear policy of how it is going to be enforced.

...

Although Alabama has yet to fully enforce its draconian immigration laws, Alabama is already beginning to suffer because of its new legislation. After Judge Sharon Blackburn upheld HB 56, nearly 25% of the state’s construction workers have failed to show up to work. In a time where Alabama is supposed to be focusing on rebuilding infrastructure following the Tuscaloosa tornadoes of last year, the lack of construction workers in Alabama is troublesome. The Perryman Group stated that Alabama could lose an estimated 18,000 jobs and $2.6 billion in revenue because of the state’s immigration measures. Estimates from the American Immigration Council could also cost the states another $130 million in lost tax revenues.Read more...

Published in the Immigration Daily

ANNOUNCEMENT: The AILA/AIC India Tour (November 2013)

JOIN THE AILA/AIC INDIA TOUR!
(November 9/11 - 21, 2013)

The American Immigration Council's International Exchange Center is co-sponsoring a once in a lifetime opportunity for cultural exchange in India. AILA and AIC have partnered to develop a program that combines international exchange with visits to the three main U.S. consulates that handle visa applications for your India-based clients. Learn about the unique issues and sensitivities in the various regions; network with business groups and professionals; and meet with U.S. consular officials.

Space is filling quickly, so REGISTER TODAY!

Contact Jai Misra at [email protected] to obtain the registration packet with trip details and cost information.Read more...

Immigration policy to see a big change

Published on Sat, Jan 07, 2012

Staff

DIRECTORS

Executive Director
Benjamin E. Johnson

Director, Immigration Policy Center
Mary Giovagnoli

Director, Legal Action Center
Melissa Crow

Director, International Exchange Center
Lois C. Magee

Director, Finance & Operations
Wilma Linares

Director, Communications
Wendy Feliz

Director, Fundraising & Development
Megan Hess

STAFF

Legal Action Center
Melissa Crow, Director
Emily Creighton, Staff Attorney
Seth Garfinkel, Legal Assistant
Mary Kenney, Senior Staff Attorney
Kristin Macleod-Ball, Fellow
Patrick Taurel, DACA Legal Services Fellow
Beth Werlin, Deputy Director

Immigration Policy Center
Mary Giovagnoli, Director
Walter Ewing, Senior Researcher
Guillermo Cantor, Senior Policy Analyst
Paul McDaniel, Immigrant Entrepreneur and Innovation Fellow
Matthew Kolodziej, Legislative Fellow
Amy Grenier, Administrative & Research Assistant

International Exchange Center
Lois Magee, Director
Jai Misra, Program Specialist
Tammie Harrison, Program Specialist
Moksheda Thapa, Program Specialist

Community Education Center
Claire Tesh, Community Education Center Manager

Fundraising and Development
Megan Hess, Director
Anh Ngo, Development Associate and AILA Chapter Liaison

Communications

Wendy Feliz, Director
Amanda Peterson Beadle, Research and Communications Associate
Eric Gibble, Online Communications Associate 

BIOGRAPHIES:

Benjamin E. Johnson, Executive DirectorRead more...

In D.C., a Push to Aid Irish Migrants

Published on Wed, Mar 21, 2012

WASHINGTON - Congress may have finally found an immigration issue it can agree on in an election year: letting in more Irish people.

At a time when the volatile issue of comprehensive immigration reform is hopelessly stalled in a divided Congress, senators of both parties are rallying behind legislation that would allow 10,500 Irish nationals to come to the U.S. to work each year.

The legislation by Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., has been attacked by critics as a cynical ploy to win Irish-American votes as Brown battles for re-election in a state where one in four residents is of Irish descent. It also has been decried by both pro-immigration and anti-immigration groups as an example of favoritism toward European immigrants over Hispanics and Asians.

But supporters of the bill, including Democratic Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, say they are trying to help reverse discrimination against Irish nationals that was inadvertently created by a 1965 overhaul of the U.S. immigration system.

That overhaul, designed to end a bias against immigrants from Latin America, Asia and Africa, made it difficult for Irish immigrants to obtain visas despite their strong cultural ties to the U.S., say supporters of Brown's bill. Hispanics and Asians have been the dominant immigrant groups to the U.S. since 1965 and, as they become citizens, their close family members have been given priority for U.S. visas as part of the U.S. government's emphasis on family reunification.

About 40 million Americans identify themselves as being of Irish descent, or about 13 percent of the U.S. population of more than 313 million. Hispanics make up about 16 percent of U.S. residents. The number of Irish immigrants granted permanent legal status in the U.S. has plunged from nearly 38,000 in the 1960s to about 16,000 in the 10 years from 2000 through 2009.Read more...

Published in the The Arizona Republic

Resources

Participant Resources

Attorney Resources

  • Comments on Proposed Regulatory Change to Sub-Part A General Provisions
  • Read more...

    The Cost of Doing Nothing

    Image: 

    Further delay on immigration reform, especially when there is broad public support for reform, wastes not just time, but money and lives as well.

    The new meaning of minority in Oregon

    Published on Sat, May 26, 2012

    Numbers from the IPC State Fact Sheets were used in an editorial written by the Oregonian Editors about the importance of immigrants in their state: Read more...

    Published in the The Oregonian