Cal­i­for­nia board approves $2M to pro­tect, pro­vide legal ser­vices to ille­gal immi­grants amid Trump crack­down

A Cal­i­for­nia board vot­ed unan­i­mous­ly to allo­cate mil­lions of dol­lars for ser­vices aimed at pro­tect­ing ille­gal immi­grants and refugees in the com­mu­ni­ty.

The Alame­da Coun­ty Board of Super­vi­sors in Oak­land decid­ed at Tues­day’s reg­u­lar meet­ing to set aside around $2.2 mil­lion for com­mu­ni­ties in their area in response to Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump’s crack­down on ille­gal immi­gra­tion, at the request of the board­’s ad hoc Alame­da Coun­ty Togeth­er for All Com­mit­tee.

“I’m com­mit­ted, and I believe Super­vi­sor [Elisa] Mar­quez is also com­mit­ted, to mak­ing sure the board, the pub­lic, has more infor­ma­tion and that this work is tru­ly effec­tive in reach­ing every sin­gle per­son in this com­mu­ni­ty that is poten­tial­ly at risk,” Super­vi­sor Nik­ki For­tu­na­to Bas, chair­woman of the com­mit­tee, said at the meet­ing.

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Min­utes from the meet­ing show that the board approved the use of $50,000 to the Asian Pacif­ic Islander Legal Out­reach to “pro­vide legal ser­vices and advo­ca­cy to mar­gin­al­ized immi­grant com­mu­ni­ties.” The mon­ey is being pulled from the Dis­trict 5 Pri­or Year Sav­ings fund and the Dis­cre­tionary Ser­vices and Sup­plies funds.

The board also approved up to $700,000 to be used by Cen­tro Legal de La Raza to estab­lish a Rapid Response Hot­line, Know Your Rights train­ing ses­sions, pre-emp­tive legal ser­vices and com­mu­ni­ty vol­un­teer net­work response coor­di­na­tion.

The orga­ni­za­tion describes itself as a “legal ser­vices agency pro­tect­ing and advanc­ing the rights of low-income, immi­grant, Black, and Lat­inx com­mu­ni­ties through bilin­gual legal rep­re­sen­ta­tion, edu­ca­tion, and advo­ca­cy.”

Tra­ba­jadores Unidos Work­ers Unit­ed was also approved for up to $500,000 to be used on “resources and prepa­ra­tion to immi­grant and refugee com­mu­ni­ties, includ­ing train­ing, mutu­al aid, and neigh­bor­hood resources.”

“TUWU believes in uphold­ing the pow­er of work­ing-class immi­grants through forg­ing class con­scious­ness and grow­ing the lead­er­ship of low-wage immi­grant work­ers,” the orga­ni­za­tion says on its web­site. “TUWU seeks to abol­ish work­place exploita­tion through orga­niz­ing, polit­i­cal edu­ca­tion, and direct action that shifts pow­er to the hands of the work­ing class.”

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The Cal­i­for­nia Col­lab­o­ra­tive for Immi­grant Jus­tice was also giv­en up to $1 mil­lion for legal ser­vices.

Accord­ing to its web­site, the CCI­J’s mis­sion is to “uti­lize coor­di­na­tion, advo­ca­cy, and legal ser­vices to fight for the lib­er­a­tion of immi­grants in deten­tion in Cal­i­for­nia.”

“For the com­mu­ni­ty work, the pro­pos­al is that the coun­ty would fund half of one year’s bud­get and there’s pri­vate fundrais­ing hap­pen­ing to fund the oth­er half,” For­tu­na­to Bas said, in part.

Super­vi­sor David Haubert said the fund­ing is “a com­mu­ni­ty effort” and is being made pos­si­ble through a “public/private part­ner­ship,” empha­siz­ing the finan­cial bur­den is not sole­ly on the coun­ty.

For­tu­na­to Bas said in a Face­book post on Wednes­day that one-third of Alame­da Coun­ty res­i­dents are immi­grants and “half of our chil­dren grow up in a house­hold with at least one immi­grant par­ent.”

“We are a diverse coun­ty, and our com­mu­ni­ty needs pro­tec­tion. The poli­cies of the fed­er­al admin­is­tra­tion are caus­ing fear among our res­i­dents,” she wrote, in part. “The unan­i­mous vote of the Board of Super­vi­sors demon­strates our county’s com­mit­ment to our immi­grant and refugee com­mu­ni­ties, who will have more access to crit­i­cal infor­ma­tion, ser­vices, and legal sup­port.”

The mon­ey approved on Tues­day comes after the board autho­rized $1.3 mil­lion in Feb­ru­ary for the Alame­da Coun­ty Pub­lic Defend­er Office’s Immi­gra­tion Unit, which pro­vides depor­ta­tion defense and legal ser­vices to ille­gal immi­grants fac­ing depor­ta­tion, accord­ing to NBC Bay Area.