Raising the Age of Juvenile Jurisdiction Will ‘Advance Justice, Strengthen Families’ in North Carolina, Moms Leader Says
Lisa Lederer, 202-371-1996
Lisa Lederer, 202-371-1996
Lisa Lederer, 202-371-1996
Lisa Lederer, 202-371-1996
Lisa Lederer, 202-371-1996
Lisa Lederer, 202-371-1996
Lisa Lederer, 202-371-1996
Lisa Lederer, 202-371-1996
Washington, DC – U.S. Senators Kamala Harris (D-CA) and Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV), Leader Nancy Pelosi and Representatives Pramila Jayapal (WA-07) and Michelle Lujan Grisham (NM-01) joined moms, leading women’s advocates, and caregivers outside the U.S. Capitol today to show support for immigration and refugee policies that protect the rights and safety of women and children. In conjunction with the event, dozens of women’s group are submitting a letter to congressional leaders urging them to engage in aggressive oversight and enact legislation that affirms the dignity of immigrant women and children. The groups are calling for the Trump administration to stop separating families, end the detention of pregnant women, and maintain the right of women seeking to escape domestic violence to be granted asylum.
At the event, organized by MomsRising, MomsRising member Izabel Solis of San Diego shared the story of her sister, an immigrant who was detained for six weeks last summer while pregnant. Her sister was separated from her husband and three young daughters and taken to a detention center run by a for-profit company ill-equipped to look after a pregnant woman. She was denied basic medical care and forced to do hard labor with unsafe products, despite the potential harm to her and her baby. She has since been reunited with her family and her baby is healthy, but she remains emotionally traumatized by the experience.
“Make no mistake, when pregnant immigrant women are being detained, and denied the health care they need, it’s a women’s issue,” said MomsRising Executive Vice President Donna Norton. “When asylum-seeking parents fleeing gangs and state-sponsored violence come here only to be torn apart from their children – and when children are purposefully separated from moms by our government – it’s a women’s issue. When our country detains women who are fleeing brutal domestic violence at the courthouse door, it’s a women’s issue. MomsRising members are both outraged and heartbroken by how our government is targeting the women among us who are immigrants and asylum-seekers.”
“AAUW is proud to be part of a community committed to increasing opportunities for all women and girls and one that fights for the civil and human rights of all Americans,” said Deborah J. Vagins, senior vice president of public policy and research at the American Association of University Women (AAUW). “We are a nation of immigrants and our education system, workplaces, communities, and economy are stronger because of their contributions. This country is great because of our diversity, not in spite of it. President Trump's decision last fall to end DACA was both morally and fiscally irresponsible. We call on Congress to pass the DREAM Act. We urge our lawmakers to protect those who dream of a better life and to keep the doors of education and equal opportunity open for all.”
“No woman -- regardless of where she’s born -- deserves to be beaten, raped or killed,” said Kiersten Stewart, director of public policy and advocacy at Futures Without Violence. “This administration is playing right into the hands of abusers with these barbaric and cruel policies. By making women and children afraid to reach out for help, they are making all of us less safe. Futures Without Violence stands with all immigrant survivors. We will not give up until all families are free to live their lives together with dignity and love.”
“The Trump Administration is systematically working to decimate a system of basic protections for unaccompanied children and immigrant families based on fundamental child welfare principles that will result in the United States returning children and families to grave harm and even death, to countries with the highest murder rates of women and girls in the world,” said KIND President Wendy Young. “We are rescinding our leadership as a nation that protects children, wherever they are from, and forsaking the values that are the bedrock of who Americans are as a people.”
“The US government is implementing horrific practices at the southern US border that are causing great harm to children and families seeking protection through the legal process of asylum,” said Diana Bate Hardy, co-founder of Mormon Women for Ethical Government. “How can we not speak out against this kind of callousness toward human suffering? Voters must make it known to every candidate campaigning for their vote that ethical, compassionate, comprehensive immigration reform is a major factor in determining who will receive their support in November.”
“Policies that demonize immigrants force immigrant victims and survivors of domestic violence into the shadows, putting them at risk for continued and escalating violence and providing abusers with a powerful tool of coercive control. As a result of current anti-immigrant policies, fewer immigrant victims and survivors are seeking services and fewer are reaching out to law enforcement for help,” says Ruth Glenn, president and CEO of the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence. “Furthermore, Attorney General Sessions’ decision to review a longstanding ruling by the Board of Immigration Appeals establishing severe domestic violence with no access to safety as a cause to grant asylum is extremely troubling; a reversal will put countless lives in danger.”
“The National Council of Jewish Women has long worked at the intersection of women’s rights and immigrant rights, and we know that to separate families, shut out those seeking refuge, and detain children is an affront to both our American and Jewish values,” said Nancy K. Kaufman, CEO of the National Council of Jewish Women. “The Torah teaches that we are all created b’Tzelem Elohim, in the image of god – all people deserve to live full lives without fear of deportation and family separation.”
“Perpetrators of domestic violence often exploit victims’ immigration status to terrorize and silence them.” Said Kim Gandy, President and CEO of the National Network to End Domestic Violence. “Current immigration policies are driving victims into the shadows and into the increased control of dangerous abusers. It is unconscionable for our policies to jeopardize the safety and well-being of victims, their families, and their communities.”
“At the National Partnership, we believe that actions speak louder than words, and the Trump administration’s actions in separating asylum-seeking parents from their children and detaining pregnant immigrant women are cruel and demonstrate disregard for the health and well-being of women and children,” said Sarah Fleisch Fink, general counsel and director of workplace policy at the National Partnership for Women & Families. “We stand with immigrant women and their families and our partner organizations in calling on Congress to promote the best interests of all families. We often hear words about ‘family values.’ We need actions that demonstrate that our elected leaders really value families.”
“Make no mistake, the Department of Homeland Security’s ongoing practices of separating families and locking up pregnant women continue to be a brazen effort at deterrence that forces women to choose between violence at home and cruelty at our shores,” said Katharina Obser, senior policy advisor at the Women’s Refugee Commission. “No one seeking protection for their family should have to fear being torn apart from their child or being locked up while pregnant when seeking asylum.”
“The Trump administration continues to target immigrant women and their families,” said Alejandra Y. Castillo, YWCA USA CEO. “As a result, immigrant women face horrific injustices -- mothers are torn from their children, survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault are denied protection, and pregnant women are detained despite obvious health risks. If the administration does not care about immigrant women, then it does not care about women, full stop. Immigrant justice is gender justice and the YWCA stands with women and families.”
Lisa Lederer, 202-371-1996
“With yesterday’s vote in the state legislature, Massachusetts moved one step closer to strengthening families and making the state’s economy more competitive by adopting a paid family and medical leave program. Whether taking time off time to care for a new child or a sick family member, being there for families is what matters. Yet too many Massachusetts workers are forced to make the impossible decision between earning a paycheck and caring for a loved one or recovering from illness or injury themselves. The legislature has done its part and we now urge Governor Charlie Baker to sign the paid family and medical leave bill as soon as possible.
“MomsRising members in Massachusetts worked tirelessly over many years to make this victory possible, sharing personal stories, reaching out to their lawmakers by phone and email, joining regional meetings, and participating in lobby days on Beacon Hill – all to advance paid leave for Massachusetts families. We also helped create critical bipartisan MOMentum for this essential program.
“Massachusetts MomsRising members applaud every state senator and state representative who voted to strengthen families and the state’s economy by adopting paid leave. The comprehensive paid leave program they passed will take effect on January 1, 2019, when workers will be able to access 12 weeks of job-protected family leave and 20 weeks of job-protected medical leave, with wage replacement of up to $850 per week. The program is funded by both workers and employers and its definition of ’family’ includes spouses, domestic partners, children, parents, parents-in-law, in loco parentis, grandchildren, grandparents and siblings. It will help take strain off business as well as families.
“The passage of this bill also builds momentum for urgently needed national legislation. Paid leave is long overdue in this country – right now, only 15 percent of U.S. workers have access to paid leave through their employers and many working people who are eligible to use leave provided by the Family and Medical Leave Act don’t do so because they can’t afford to take unpaid time away from work. We are the only industrialized nation without this key policy in place. In addition to progress in the states, we need a national standard – one that is accessible, affordable and inclusive. Ultimately we need Congress to pass the Family And Medical Insurance Leave (FAMILY) Act, which would create a social insurance fund that benefits all workers in this country.”
Lisa Lederer, 202-371-1996
“Black Women’s Equal Pay Day is an annual reminder of a gross and continuing injustice in our country. Today in the United States, Black women face a shameful wage gap of 63 cents on the dollar, and it is even worse – just 51 cents – for Black mothers.
“These losses add up: Black women are typically paid $21,000 less in wages each year than white, non-Hispanic men. A Black woman should not have to work more than seven months into the next year for her wages to catch up to those typically paid to a white, non-Hispanic man. Wage inequality for Black women persists at every education level and in every occupation. It is outrageous and must end.
“Black women deserve economic security, fair wages and an end to discrimination in the workforce, in health care and in the criminal justice system. If we want to stop observing this day, we must address the systemic inequalities that keep these wage gaps in place.
“Closing the pay gap should be a top priority for every lawmaker. It is long past time for laws that will bring real and lasting change. We urge Congress to advance policies that combat wage inequality and boost economic security, including fair pay, earned sick days, paid family and medical leave, and affordable child care. Congress must enact meaningful legislation, including the Paycheck Fairness Act, the Family And Medical Insurance Leave (FAMILY) Act and the Healthy Families Act, that make our workplaces more fair. The wage gap that penalizes Black women must end."
Lisa Lederer, 202-371-1996
Statement from Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, executive director and CEO of MomsRising, a national online and on-the-ground organization of more than 1 million mothers and their families, on the tax plan the House of Representatives passed today:
“There seems to be no limit to the tax breaks Republicans in Congress want to give to the wealthiest one percent, and the devastating cuts they are willing to make to programs working families need to pay for them.
“The bill the House of Representatives passed today is grossly irresponsible and reflects priorities that are utterly skewed. It would cost $2.8 trillion over the next decade and would be paid for by cuts to vitally important health, education, housing, food and nutrition programs that boost families and communities.
“That it follows the $1.9 trillion tax cut Congress passed late last year adds insult to injury. This bill would rig the economy and exacerbate income inequality even further. No one, except maybe the GOP’s wealthy campaign donors, asked for this second tax scam. In fact, a recent Republican poll showed that the vast majority of voters believe the GOP’s tax plans are a giveaway to the one percent and to Wall Street at the expense of working families. Only 30 percent of women approve of the tax plan Congress passed last December because they recognize that this type of tax policy is harmful to our families and our economy.
“This frenzy to give tax breaks to mega-corporations and the ultra-wealthy is outrageously irresponsible. Rather than spending trillions of dollars more to give a tax cut to the super wealthy and increase our national debt, we should be making investments in programs that strengthen job creation and training and boost working families' health, nutrition, and education. We should also strengthen working family tax credits so our families can better contribute to our national economy.
“We urge the Senate to refuse to even consider this grossly irresponsible bill. It deserves to be rejected out of hand.”