Reading this made me very sad. It shouldn't be a privilege to raise a healthy family in America. To think that inhumane, anti-immigrant, and anti-family federal policy is preying on this generation of families and youth whose lives are already precarious is wrongful and perverse.
We not only need a new government but a new culture that repudiates institutionalized trauma to immigrant children and families as acceptable policy.
-Angela Valenzuela
The American Family Makes This Country Great, and It’s in Danger
We not only need a new government but a new culture that repudiates institutionalized trauma to immigrant children and families as acceptable policy.
-Angela Valenzuela
The American Family Makes This Country Great, and It’s in Danger
By Janet Murguía, president of UnidosUS | May 2, 2019
George Zaldivar embrace his son Francysco, 8, before walking into the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility.Daniel Brenner for The New York Times |
President Trump’s stance on legal and undocumented immigrants could have devastating results.
Few of the Trump
administration’s policies were as universally reviled by Americans across the
country as the family separation policy at the border. Yet many Americans would
be surprised to learn that the heartbreaking images of children being torn from
their parents’ arms are playing out, often invisibly, in communities in this
country, posing a severe threat to millions of American children and their
families.
In the months leading up to
the election, Donald Trump vowed to deport the 11 million undocumented
immigrants in the United States. In 2017, the Trump
administration unveiled an aggressive
immigration agenda that made all immigrants a priority,
regardless of whether they had a criminal conviction. As a result,
apprehensions of immigrants with no criminal convictions skyrocketed during the
first 14 months of his term.
A new
report by UnidosUS found that for the nearly six million American
children under the age of 18 who live in a household with undocumented
residents, mostly parents, the risk of being separated from one or both parents
has risen exponentially under the Trump administration. The consequences for
the children who remain could be devastating: causing permanent, irreparable
harm that will play out for years to come.
The deportation, and even the
arrest or detention, of a parent or other household family member can leave a
lasting financial impact on those left behind. By some estimates, removing a
breadwinner from a household reduces the family’s income by
47 percent and can result in frequent
relocations or the loss of the home. Families are often further
financially constrained by the inevitable legal fees associated with
deportation proceedings.
The damage inflicted upon these children who are United States
citizens is not just the collateral damage of immigration policies. In some
instances, the administration is choosing to target mixed-immigration-status
families — those that include American citizens, legal immigrants and
undocumented members. The recent announcement that the Department of Housing
and Urban Development will restrict subsidized housing for all families
with undocumented members could push 25,000 families and
their American children into homelessness.
Common sense tells us, and research confirms, that stable
households and environments are critical factors in ensuring educational
achievement. According to 68 percent of the educators who were surveyed in
a 2018 University of California
at Los Angeles study, aggressive immigration enforcement has led to
increased absenteeism among Latino students, many fearing that a parent will be
taken away while they are at school. Because absenteeism is directly correlated
with high school dropout rates, this behavior not only affects academic grades
but also hurts the student’s future employment opportunities and leads to lower
wages in adulthood.
Educators are
also sounding the alarm bell, noting that children under threat of family
separation are showing signs of trauma, or what medical professionals call
“toxic stress.” If prolonged, toxic stress can impede brain development, harm
vital organs and result in a variety of mental and physical disorders.
And things could get worse. The administration’s attempt to
terminate the Temporary Protected Status, or T.P.S., and Deferred Action for
Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, programs would change the status of a million
people from “documented” to “undocumented.” In economic terms this could result
in nearly $400 billion in lost GDP income over 10 years.
Even though the effort
has been blocked by a court, the half-million American children of DACA and
T.P.S. recipients are already going to bed and waking up wondering whether the
next letter in the mail, the next phone call or the next knock on the door is
the one that breaks their family apart. They, along with the millions of other
children who fear that a parent will be taken away during a work-site raid or
what used to be routine check-ins with the Department of Homeland Security, are
bearing the brunt of President Trump’s immigration policies.
As you tuck your own
children into bed at night or pack their lunch in the morning, think about the
effect these policies will have not just on the children of undocumented
parents but on the country as a whole. The trauma we’re inflicting is chipping
away at the core of what makes this country great: the American family.
The president and his
supporters often rally around the slogan “America First.” But these short
sighted policies could disrupt an entire generation of American children.
Janet Murguía is president of UnidosUS, formerly the National
Council of La Raza, a Latino civil rights and advocacy organization.
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