Author: mopress

  • Flooded Colonia Residents Say Dolly Aftermath is Worst in Memory

    Excerpt from Steve Taylor’s report in the Rio Grande Guardian, “‘We are the abandoned ones,’ say San Carlos residents”:

    “Just along the street from where Flores stood guard, members of the Esperanza De Amore church had hooked up a blue tarpaulin sheet to a fence next the ditch, under which they serve hot food. Some residents, who did not wish to be named, said it was their first hot meal since the hurricane. “We need this for our kids,” said one.

    “Cano and Belinda Rodriguez, a student, showed the Guardian where most San Carlos residents were getting their food and water. It was the local community center where Rodriguez works as a volunteer. The center has been commandeered by the American Red Cross. Four of the Red Cross’s Disaster Relief trucks were parked outside. Children were helping their parents carry ice and bottled water from the trucks to a room inside the center.

    “The center was packed and baking hot. Mothers and their children had been waiting patiently for hours for food and water. There must have been 800 or more people packed inside.

    “Ray Roberts, a Red Cross volunteer from east Tennessee, explained the operation. “We are feeding about 2,500 people with each run. We get the food from Kitchen No. 1 in McAllen. Once we run out we go back and bring more supplies. We will be back with more supplies this afternoon,” Roberts said.

    “Rodriguez said there has not been enough food and water to go around. “On Sunday, the Red Cross ran out of food and water. Many people went without. Our people need more water,” Rodriguez said. She said San Carlos has been a “desperate” place to be for the past five days. “Some people are living in vans. We have the smell of dead animals. There are lots of mosquitoes. I have lived here 18 years and I have never seen anything like this,” she said.

    “Rodriguez said she too had not seen one county official visit San Carlos since the flooding started. “All we have seen is the Red Cross and one church. No one else has been here,” she said.”

  • Vigil for Families in Detention

    On Sunday, December 7, at 4 p.m. a peaceful coalition of individuals and groups opposing Willliamson County’s participation in the detention of asylum seekers will gather on the Williamson County Courthouse steps in downtown Georgetown.

    Although federal law requires the “least restrictive setting possible” for immigrant families, in 2006 Williamson County contracted with Corrections Corporation of America, a private for-profit prison company, to incarcerate non-criminal women and children in the T. Don Hutto detention facility in Taylor. The contracts between ICE, Williamson County, and CCA are up for renewal in January.

    Please help us show Williamson County, Homeland Security, and the private prison industry that imprisoning innocent children will no longer be tolerated in the United States of America.

    We will meet in the parking lot on Austin Ave. between 4th and 5th Streets in Georgetown at 3:30 p.m. and walk 3 blocks to the County Courthouse to hear community leaders speak in support of alternatives to the incarceration of families awaiting asylum or immigration hearings.

    There are currently 385 detainees in T. Don Hutto including 92 children. As a result of the lawsuits brought by ACLU and the UT School of Law Immigration Clinic, detainees are now allowed to wear their own clothing. Thanks to a recent intervention by the UT School of Law Immigration Clinic, ICE has also agreed to allow detainees to use phone cards given to them rather than having to buy the cards through CCA.

    If you would like to bring a gift to the vigil, suggestions include new toys in their original packaging, books, music players, music, lotions, shampoos, candy, phone cards, and clothing such as sweaters and warm socks.

    For further information or to sign up to speak, please contact Sherry Dana at sdana787@gmail.com. 512-868-5181

  • MALDEF Secures Landmark Education Victory in Texas

    From the MALDEFian

    Judge orders improvements in programs for English language learners

    AUGUST 14, 2008 – Citing “palpable injustice” a federal court found that the State of Texas is failing to overcome the language barriers faced by tens of thousands of English Language Learner (ELL) students in the State’s public school secondary programs. MALDEF’s victory in United States v. Texas represents the most comprehensive judicial decision concerning the civil rights of ELLs in a quarter century.

    The case was born out of long-standing discrimination against Latino students in Texas schools, which resulted in their inclusion in a 1981 Order that required the State of Texas to, among other things, provide appropriate and effective language educational programs for ELL students. Twenty-five years later, MALDEF and Multicultural Education Training and Advocacy, Inc. (META) filed a Motion under the Modified Order to enforce its terms. MALDEF argued that the State had failed to implement and monitor the bilingual and English as a Second Language (ESL) programs for ELL students in the state, resulting in the denial of equal educational opportunities for those students.

    In July 2007, District Court Judge William Wayne Justice ruled that MALDEF was not entitled to the relief it sought. After MALDEF and META persisted in the case on behalf of ELL students, Judge Justice vacated his earlier ruling in its entirety. Finding that “[s]econdary…students in bilingual education fail terribly under every metric,” he ordered the State to create a language program for ELL secondary students and a monitoring system that met the requirements of the federal Equal Education Opportunity Act.

    This ruling was a tremendous victory for ELL students in a state that has one of the highest percentages of ELLs in the country. In the 2004-05 school year, more than 15 percent of the student population in Texas’ public schools were identified as ELL. Ninety-three percent of those were Hispanic. According to the Texas Education Agency, only 13.1 percent of those students are recent immigrants.

    The education system has significantly failed these students, allowing them to continue to experience the effects of the discrimination that first brought MALDEF to court on their behalf nearly 30 years ago. The court found that not only does the Texas Education Agency under-identify ELL students, but the “achievement standards for intervention are arbitrary and not based upon equal educational opportunity; the failing achievement of higher grades is masked by passing scores of lower grades; and the failure of individual school campuses is masked by only analyzing data on the larger district level.”

    “Failed implementation cannot prolong the existence of a failed program into perpetuity,” the court concluded. Texas now has until January 2009 to come up with a revamped monitoring system that actually measures equal educational opportunities and an improved educational program for secondary ELL students. The new system will be introduced in the 2009-10 school year.

    “This decision gives hope for the future of thousands of young Texans. Its importance cannot be overstated,” said MALDEF Staff Attorney David Hinojosa who, along with META, brought the case on behalf of LULAC and the American GI Forum.

  • Archive: Hutto Protest

    The following item previously appeared in the announcements section of TCRR–gm

    This message is from Antonio Diaz of the Texas Indigenous Council in San Antonio. He and his sisters and brothers have been leaders in the campaign against the TDH immigrant family prison since early in the protests, which began in December, 2006:

    “Native people celebrate death as it is apart of the circle of life, there is no need to fear physical death, the death of innocence on the other hand is a sad thing indeed. We will be going to Taylor on Sat. Nov.1st to recognize the Death of innocence of the Children Detained at T.D.Hutto Prison, Nov.1st is known as “Dia de los Inocentes”.

    “Dia de los Muertos from Nov 1st to Nov 2nd. This loss of innocence due to incarceration because of greed of private prison corporations like Corrections Corp. of America must be addressed and the policy of fear and division that allows for rampant greed to dictate immoral immgration legislation must come to an end. Reinstating the Catch and Release program will be the first step to bringing justice into immigration reform. Join us if you are able 6 to 8 pm in Taylor TX. at T.D.Hutto Res. Ctr. — for more info (210) 396- 9805
    Antonio Diaz”

    T. Don Hutto is at 1001 Welch St., Taylor, TX (map). From Austin, take I-35 north to Round Rock. Exit Hwy 79. Turn right on 79 and drive east to Taylor. Just before you enter Taylor, go right on the 79 bypass (sign says to Rockdale). Take the first left onto S. Edmond St. Edmond ends at Welch. Go right on Welch and you can’t miss the prison.

    Solidarity,

    Leslie Cunningham

    “Las luchas obreras/No tienen fronteras.”