50th Anniversary Of “El Plan De Santa Barbara”​ And Advance Parole Campaign Continues

CMSC
California-Mexico Studies Center

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Pressure from Dreamers to restore Advance Parole permits to travel abroad

BY: ARACELI MARTÍNEZ ORTEGALa Opinión ~ FEB. 3, 2019

Sheila Salinas, beneficiary of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program since 2012, raised her voice to ask Congressman Jimmy Gómez for his support so that permits are reinstated and they can travel abroad and re-enter the country, what is known as Advance Parole .

“Since President Trump canceled DACA in September of 2017, they were suspended,” Sheila told the congressman during a meeting with leaders of organizations advocating for immigrants in Los Angeles.

She works for Altamed in the Government Relations Department. She studied a master’s degree in public administration at Cal State Long Beach and awaits a response from the University of Southern California (USC) to do a doctorate in gerontology.

” Not being able to travel outside the country affects us when we need to do a semester or participate in an academic activity abroad, ” she explains.

The impact is also felt when, due to labor issues, they need to travel abroad. ” Not having the advance parole, prevents us from growing and opening more professional doors,” she says.

But it also affects those Dreamers whose parents and relatives live in other countries and are seriously ill. “You cannot go see them,” says Sheila.

From January 14 to 18, at least 20 dreamers from different states traveled to Washington, DC to launch a campaign to reestablish Advance Parole for the DACA program.

“We succeeded because we collected almost 30 signatures of congress members, in addition to the 14 that were already in the letter sent on December 11, 2018 Secretary of the Department of National Security Kirstjen Nielsen, in which she was asked to restore the authorization for the Advance Parole”, affirms Professor Armando Vázquez-Ramos, president of the California-Mexico Studies Center, Inc., and who leads the efforts to reactivate permits to travel abroad for Dreamers.

Since 2014, he has organized travel-study trips to Mexico. ” We have taken five groups of 35 students from up to 25 universities, ” he says.

It is worth mentioning that Congressman Jimmy Gómez and many other Latino legislators are not included among the signatories.

He added that they are satisfied because they accomplished to start the campaign and have the second round ready to return to Washington in early April and get more support from national organizations and legislators and educate them on the issue.

“The most important objective of the next DC trip is to schedule a hearing in Congress exclusively on the subject, and we want the Secretary Nielsen to be summoned to listen to the moving testimonies of the Dreamers and to continue fighting for our educational program,” he says.

“This is the first time that a national effort has been made to advocate to restore DACA’s Advance Parole, which does not harm anyone. Its elimination is racist and discriminatory. Not allowing it has a very profound humanitarian impact. It is a real tragedy “, considers Professor Vázquez-Ramos.

In January of last year, Mayra Garibo’s father died in an accident in Mazatlán, Mexico. Luis Tinoco’s grandfather lost his life in December 2018 in Guanajuato. Karina lost her grandmother three months ago. None of these three young DACA beneficiaries could visit their family and heal their loss due to the arbitrary decision by the Department of Homeland Security to deny all Advance Parole applications to DACA beneficiaries.

“I could not say goodbye to my father. I tried to get a humanitarian Advance Parole permit, but unfortunately they denied me because of the elimination of DACA”, testified Mayra Garibo during their visit to Washington, DC, in January.

Because the Supreme Court decided not to rule on the Trump administration’s appeal to eliminate DACA, the program will continue until mid-2020. Therefore, Professor Vázquez points out that DHS must grant Advance Parole permits to Dreamers to have the opportunity to travel for humanitarian, educational or work reasons. For the second stage of the campaign, they seek to raise $25,000 to cover the travel expenses of 50 Dreamers from all over the country to converge at Washington, DC in the spring. The California-Mexico Studies Center needs to raise at least $500 to cover transportation, lodging and food for each participant in the trip.

Sign Our Petition

SUPPORT THE SPRING DELEGATION

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DACA recipients fight for Advance Parole to be reconsidered (Spectrum News)

By: Zack Tawatari, Spectrum News Socal – Feb. 11, 2019

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Please help us continue our work towards restoring Advance Parole for DACA recipients!

MAKE YOUR TAX-DEDUCTIBLE DONATION TODAY!

Check out our  CrowdRise Campaign, or donate on the button below:

Visit our campaign website:    www.advanceparole.org

Follow the cause on social media:  Facebook |  Instagram |  Twitter

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ADVANCE PAROLE VOICES

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RESOURCES

Ethnic Studies has been offered to LBUSD students for three academic years, beginning in Fall 2015. Students primarily enrolled in the foundational course Ethnic Studies 215: US Diversity and the Ethnic Experience, accounting for 90% of all Ethnic Studies enrollment (n=1063) and performed well with 70% earning As or Bs. Generally, students who have taken Ethnic Studies perform at higher levels than students who did not choose to enroll in Ethnic Studies with significant differences observed for GPA, SBAC, On-track status for Graduation and A-G, number of AP courses taken and Social-Emotional Learning measures…

 DOWNLOAD FULL REPORT HERE

Please watch the following CMSC-produced documentaries on the Long Beach Unified School District (LBUSD) and El Rancho Unified School District (ERUSD) Ethnic Studies programs:

ERUSD Leader of the Ethnic Studies Revolution (2018)

Legacy and Leadership: The Long Beach Ethnic Studies Program (2017)

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UPCOMING EVENTS

50th Anniversary of El Plan de Santa Barbara Conference

We are pleased to announce that Prof. Armando Vazquez-Ramos will deliver the Sal Castro Memorial Keynote on Friday February 22, 2019 at the UC Santa Barbara’s 50th Anniversary of “El Plan de Santa Barbara” Conference.

El Plan de Santa Barbara is a historical 155-page document that served as the blueprint for the inception of Chicano Studies programs in colleges and universities throughout the nation, and collectively written and published in 1969 by the conferees.  The conference will be held again at the University of California Santa Barbara, it is free, and we invite students, faculty and the public to attend ! ! !

FULL PROGRAM AVAILABLE HERE

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Regeneración:

Three Generations of Revolutionary Ideology

At the Vincent Price Museum through Feb. 16, 2019

Regeneración: Three Generations of Revolutionary Ideology examines the transnational exchange and circulation of revolutionary and activist ideas through which political protest intersected with experimental artistic practices across generations, and between the U.S. and Mexico. The exhibition centers on three instances of political and cultural production, each called Regeneración, and the interconnected ideas and relationships between them.

 READ MORE

–> Read full newsletter –> http://mailchi.mp/17889eb15c4a/50th-anniversary-of-el-plan-de-santa-barbara-and-advance-parole-campaign-continues

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