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News
Local Advocates Fight to Keep Immigration on the Agenda
by Marianne McCune
NEW YORK, NY September 16, 2009 —While lawmakers in Washington focus on healthcare reform, advocates in the New York area this week are fighting to keep immigration on the national agenda. WNYC's Marianne McCune reports.
Immigrants in New York and New Jersey have been holding press conferences, town hall meetings, protests and vigils - clamoring for a place on President Obama's to-do list.
They're frustrated because, so far, the Obama administration has changed little about the Bush policies that irked them most - continued arrests, detention, and deportation of immigrants whose children are citizens; the use of local police and prison officials to help enforce immigration laws; the requirement that federal contractors prove their employees have legal working papers via a system critics say sometimes gets legal workers fired.
Under Obama, the Department of Homeland Security has made some policy changes that are favorable to the more than 10 million immigrants who are in the country illegally. But comprehensive reform has not made it back onto the domestic agenda of the President or Congress.
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