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Half a million immigrants could eventually get US citizenship under a new plan from Biden

immigrants
President Joe Biden speaks during an event marking the 12th anniversary of the Deferred Action of Childhood Arrivals program, in the East Room of the White House, Tuesday, June 18, 2024, in Washington. (Photo: AP/Evan Vucci)

President Joe Biden ordered expansive election-year action Tuesday to offer potential citizenship to hundreds of thousands of immigrants without legal status in the U.S., aiming to balance his recent aggressive crackdown on the southern border that enraged advocates and many Democratic lawmakers.

The president announced that his administration will, in the coming months, allow certain U.S. citizens’ spouses without legal status to apply for permanent residency and eventually citizenship without having to first depart the country. The move from Biden, a Democrat, could affect upwards of half a million immigrants, according to senior administration officials.

“The Statue of Liberty is not some relic of American history. It still stands for who we are,» Biden said from a crowded East Room at the White House, filled with advocates, congressional Democrats and immigrants who would be eligible for the program. “But I also refuse to believe that for us to continue to be America that embraces immigration, we have to give up securing our border. They’re false choices.”

Biden’s action, which amounts to the most expansive federal protection for immigrants in over a decade, sets up a significant political contrast with presumptive GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump, whose hardline stance on mass deportations includes rhetoric casting migrants as dangerous criminals “poisoning the blood” of America.

President Joe Biden listens as he meets with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg in the Oval Office at the White House, Monday, June 17, 2024. (Photo: AP/Mark Schiefelbein)

On Tuesday, Biden accused “my predecessor” of preying on fears about immigrants as he chastised Trump administration moves, such as a zero-tolerance policy at the southern border that led to the separation of families. But Trump has leaned into his own policies as Biden has faced disapproval of his handling of immigration throughout his presidency. At a rally in Racine, Wis., on Tuesday, Trump proclaimed: “Our country is under invasion. We should not be talking amnesty. We should be talking about stopping the invasion instead.”

To qualify for Biden’s actions, an immigrant must have lived in the United States for 10 years and be married to a U.S. citizen, both as of Monday. If a qualifying immigrant’s application is approved, he or she would have three years to apply for a green card and receive a temporary work permit and be shielded from deportation in the meantime.

About 50,000 noncitizen children with parents who are married to U.S. citizen could also potentially qualify for the process, according to senior administration officials who briefed reporters on the condition of anonymity. There is no requirement on how long the couple must have been married, but no one becomes eligible after Monday. That means immigrants who reach that 10-year mark after Monday will not qualify for the program, according to the officials.

Senior administration officials said they anticipate the process will be open for applications by the end of the summer. Fees to apply have yet to be determined.

Biden formally unveiled his plans at a Tuesday event at the White House, which also marked the 12th anniversary of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, a popular Obama-era directive that offered deportation protections and temporary work permits for young immigrants who lack legal status.

President Joe Biden turns to the others on the dais after speaking during an event marking the 12th anniversary of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Tuesday, June 18, 2024. (Photo: AP/Susan Walsh)

The announcement was welcome news to families with mixed immigration status, such as Antonio and Brenda Valle in Los Angeles. They have been married for nearly 12 years and have two sons who are U.S. citizens, but they have lived with the worry every two years that Brenda Valle’s status as a DACA recipient will not be renewed.

“We can start planning more long-term, for the future, instead of what we can do for the next two years,” she said.

Foday Turay was among those invited to the White House Tuesday for the announcement. He came to the U.S. when he was 10 years old from Sierra Leone, and is now a father to a young son and married to a third-generation U.S. citizen. Although he’s enrolled in DACA and working as an assistant district attorney in Philadelphia, his status doesn’t provide relief from the constant worry of deportation.

“My wife is tremendously impacted by this,” Turay said on Tuesday before the ceremony. «You know, every day she talks to me about what’s going to happen. What if I get deported? You know, how are we going to raise our son? What country are we going to raise him?”

Republicans were making their own sharp contrasts with Biden’s plan. In a likely preview of GOP campaign ads, Rep. Richard Hudson, chair of House Republicans’ campaign arm, called the Biden policy a “mass amnesty plan.” Other Republicans, such as Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, anticipated that this latest directive would be struck down by the courts.

First lady Jill Biden speaks during an event marking the 12th anniversary of the Deferred Action of Childhood Arrivals program, in the East Room of the White House, Tuesday, June 18, 2024, in Washington. (Photo: AP/Evan Vucci)

Tuesday’s announcement came two weeks after Biden unveiled a sweeping crackdown at the U.S.-Mexico border that effectively halted asylum claims for those arriving between officially designated ports of entry. Immigrant-rights groups have sued the Biden administration over that directive, which a senior administration official said Monday had led to fewer border encounters between ports.

Biden’s allies believe that the approach he is taking with his twin actions on immigration this month will resonate with voters.

“The only party that is being serious about border security is the Democrats. The only party that’s being thoughtful and compassionate about what to do with people who are living in the shadows are the Democrats,” said Sen. Chris Murphy, a Connecticut Democrat who helped author a bipartisan border bill earlier this year. “The Republican Party has decided to take a walk on border security.”

Because the shadow of a second Trump administration looms over Biden’s new policy, Tuesday’s actions will set off a months-long sprint by Latino organizations to get as many people to apply for the program as possible. Trump could dissolve the program if he is reelected, but immigrants who are granted the parole status would still be protected.

Among advocates, Gustavo Torres, the executive director of CASA, said Biden’s announcement would energize Latino communities to get out and support him.

“This is what our communities have needed to rally behind President Biden for reelection,” he said.

Biden also announced new regulations that will allow certain DACA beneficiaries and other young immigrants to more easily qualify for long-established work visas. That would allow qualifying immigrants to have protection that is sturdier than the work permits offered by DACA, which is currently facing legal challenges and is no longer taking new applications.

The power that Biden is invoking with his Tuesday announcement for spouses is not a novel one. The policy would expand on authority used by Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama to allow “parole in place” for family members of military members, said Andrea Flores, a former policy adviser in the Obama and Biden administrations who is now a vice president at FWD.us, an immigration advocacy organization.

The parole-in-place process allows qualifying immigrants to get on the path to U.S. permanent residency without leaving the country, removing a common barrier for those without legal status but married to Americans. Flores called it “the biggest win for the immigrant rights movement since the announcement of DACA 12 years ago.”

The same progressives who were infuriated with Biden’s asylum order praised the president on Tuesday. Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., who leads the Congressional Progressive Caucus, commended Biden and said the actions would help keep American families together.

“Many Americans would be shocked to hear that when a U.S. citizen marries an undocumented person, their spouse is not automatically eligible for citizenship,” she said. ”Imagine loving someone, marrying them, and then still continuing to fear you would be separated from them.

La Administración Biden anuncia un alivio migratorio que beneficiará a jóvenes y a indocumentados casados con ciudadanos

Directora de la campaña Biden-Harris 2024, Julie Chávez Rodríguez. Archivo EFE

Este martes 18 de junio el presidente Biden anunció que el Departamento de Seguridad Nacional tomará medidas para garantizar que los ciudadanos estadounidenses con cónyuges e hijos no ciudadanos puedan mantener unidas a sus familias.

El requisito es que estén en el país al menos desde hace 10 años, el beneficio también incluye a los hijastros de los ciudadanos.

Se les otorgaría un permiso de trabajo por tres años, con camino a una residencia permanente.  

Además, permitirá a los beneficiarios de DACA, conocidos como los “dreamers”, soñadores en español, y en general a todos los jóvenes, que reciban más rápidamente visas de trabajo, siempre y cuando hayan obtenido un título en una institución estadounidense acreditada de educación superior en los Estados Unidos y que hayan recibido una oferta de empleo de un empleador estadounidense en un campo relacionado con su título. A diferencia del alivio migratorio que otorga el DACA para que tengan un permiso de trabajo temporal, con este permiso por tres años, se abre un camino para poder acceder a la residencia permanente lo que abre un camino a la ciudadanía.

Durante el fin de semana fue el doceavo aniversario de la creación del programa DACA que ha dado resultados importantes en la econmia de los Estados Unidos.

Los dreamers han contribuido con aproximadamente 140 mil millones de dólares a la economía estadounidense en impuestos y más en la década posterior a la creación del programa.

Muchos de ellos trabajan en hospitales, aulas, y también son propietarios de pequeñas empresas.

Dentro de los esfuerzos que la Administración de Biden ha intentado, está el envió al Congreso de un plan para proporcionar un camino hacia la ciudadanía para los dreamers ampliar las vías legales para la migración e invertir en una seguridad fronteriza más perspicaz y efectiva. Amplió el acceso a atención médica asequible y de calidad a través de la Ley de Cuidado de Salud a Bajo Precio para más de 100.000 dreamers. Y continúa pidiendo al Congreso que proporcione un camino hacia la ciudadanía para los sonadores.

Cabe recordar que Donald Trump,  intentó eliminar DACA en cada oportunidad que tuvo cuando era presidente, a pesar que la gran mayoría de los estadounidenses están de acuerdo con un alivio migratorio permanente para este grupo de inmigrantes que llegaron cuando eran menores de edad.

La Administración Trump intentó poner fin al programa DACA, cada vez que pudo, y quitarle así protecciones legales a cientos de miles de personas.  En su actual campaña vuelve a poner en la mira a los inmigrantes y dice que están “envenenando la sangre” de Estados Unidos. Promete eliminar la ciudadanía por nacimiento a niños nacidos en territorio estadounidense y de crear campos de detención masiva para acorralar inmigrantes, y ejecutar la “madre de todas las deportaciones”.

Trump también eliminó las reformas para asegurar la frontera en décadas para ayudarse políticamente.

Ante el anuncio histórico de la Administración Biden, la directora de la campaña Biden-Harris 2024, Julie Chávez Rodríguez, publicó las siguientes declaraciones.

“Las familias deben estar juntas, así de simple. Es por eso por lo que las acciones que el presidente Biden está impulsando hoy, son tan importantes, y también son un poderoso recordatorio del imperdonable legado de Donald Trump de arrebatar a niños llorando de los brazos de sus padres, cuando implementó su política de separación familiar. De hecho, la sombría realidad es que, si Trump tiene la oportunidad, irá aún más lejos: volvería a implementar la separación familiar, utilizaría a la Guardia Nacional para arrestar y deportar inmigrantes y crearía campos de detención masivos. No porque vaya a arreglar nuestro sistema de inmigración, sino porque Trump cree que es una buena política atacar a los inmigrantes vulnerables (…) Nuestro sistema de inmigración no funciona y requiere líderes reales como el presidente Biden que tomen medidas decisivas incluso cuando otros en Washington fracasan. No dejará de luchar por la reforma migratoria integral que nuestro país necesita desesperadamente y nunca les dará la espalda a nuestras familias. Porque sólo un “bully” débil y desesperado como Trump arrebataría a bebés llorando de los brazos de sus madres”.

EE. UU. subraya que también los trabajadores indocumentados tienen derechos en su país

indocumentados
Inmigrantes hacen fila en espera de ser enviados a un albergue y con la esperanza de tener pronto un empleo, en Nueva York (EE.UU.). Fotografía de archivo. (Foto: EFE/Ruth Hernández Beltran)

El Departamento de Trabajo de Estados Unidos (DOL, en inglés) subrayó este martes que los derechos laborales básicos en el país protegen también a los trabajadores indocumentados, y animó a cualquier trabajador a informarse sobre ellos en el portal web migrantworker.gov, disponible también en español (trabajadormigrante.gov) y en seis idiomas más.

En una conferencia de prensa, la subsecretaria adjunta de derechos laborales internacionales, Thea Lee, recordó que las leyes laborales se aplican para todos por igual, también a los indocumentados, que tienen derecho a un entorno de trabajo seguro, a estar libres del acoso y la violencia o ser pagado por las horas trabajadas.

Pero Lee reconoció que los trabajadores indocumentados se sienten más vulnerables y «tienen miedo de dar un paso al frente (para denunciar un caso) por miedo a la deportación y a otros riesgos», un fenómeno que se repite con los demás servicios del gobierno, que suelen suscitar la desconfianza de los inmigrantes irregulares.

Junto a Lee tomó la palabra Elizabeth Peña, asesora en derechos de los migrantes en el DOL, quien abundó en la misma idea de derechos iguales para todos: «Sea cual sea el estatus migratorio, tienen derechos como trabajadores, y queremos proveérselos con esta página web. No importa cómo estés en este país, mereces ser tratado con justicia y gozar de todos los recursos disponibles para ti».

Las dos funcionarias animaron a cualquier trabajador a entrar en la página web, que contiene una gran cantidad de datos y consejos prácticos sobre salarios, derechos sindicales, denuncia de represalias, trata de personas, asesoramiento legal, seguridad laboral, etcétera.

Estados Unidos dispone de una alta demanda de mano de obra en numerosos ámbitos, pero tropieza con unas leyes laborales que demoran un mínimo de seis meses (a veces hasta 18) para lograr un permiso de trabajo, lo que empuja a miles de trabajadores a la economía sumergida.

City Kicks off the Start of Summer Meals Programming at Heitzman Recreation Center

summer
(Photo: File)

City Kicks off the Start of Summer Meals Programming at Heitzman Recreation Center Over 500 free summer meal sites will open across Philadelphia by Monday, July 1.
 

PHILADELPHIA. –  The City of Philadelphia’s Office of Children and Families, Parks & Recreation, and American Dairy Association North East kicked off another Philly Summer Meals program season for children and teens at Heitzman Recreation Center. The kick-off event featured an afternoon of resources, activities, music, food, and special appearances.

“No child living in Philadelphia should worry about food or wonder where their next warm meal will come from,” said Mayor Cherelle L. Parker. “The city’s summer meals program helps ease that worry by making nutritious meals available to our young people while school is out of session. I am incredibly proud of the collaboration across community, government, schools, and social services that made this happen, keeping hundreds of meal sites open across the city again this season.”

In partnership with Nutritional Development Services of the Archdiocese, the School District of Philadelphia, the Philadelphia Housing Authority, and other local and federal partners, the City will have more than 500 free summer meal sites available to young persons up to age 18. 

“Thousands of Philadelphia students rely on school meals during the year which means that when school is not in session, they risk losing access to nutritious food,” said Vanessa Garrett Harley, Chief Deputy Managing Director for the Office of Children and Families. “The summer meals program is an incredible, community-based effort that ensures our children are food secure until the next school year begins. I am thankful to the City’s partners, local organizations, and volunteers who work together each year to make this possible.”

Residents should know:

  • Most summer meal sites will begin serving meals on Monday, June 17.
  • All children and youth up to age 18 in Philadelphia are eligible. No student ID, proof of citizenship, or registration is required.
  • Meal distribution days and times vary by site. Families should call ahead or visit the site to confirm the schedule at phila.gov/food. 
  • Meals must be eaten on-site due to USDA regulations. Most summer meals are funded through the USDA’s Summer Food Services Program.


“Children need nutritious food over the summer to fuel their fun and keep them healthy and strong,” said Susan Slawson, Philadelphia Parks & Recreation Commissioner. “Over 6,000 campers will receive free meals and snacks at Parks & Rec summer day camps, and children all over Philadelphia will get free food through our PlayStreets program. I’m grateful to all the staff and volunteers who keep our children fed and nourished over the summer.” 

“We know that food insecurity is a significant barrier for some of our families, and hunger has a negative impact on many areas of a child’s health, especially learning,” said Superintendent Tony B. Watlington, Sr., Ed.D. “When students are out for summer, they lose that consistent access to nutritious meals. We are thankful to our partners, who collectively support our families and provide them with access to meals at District sites and across the City during summer months when school is not in session. Together, we are not only providing meals but improving students’ health which directly impacts student success.”

“For more than 55 years, USDA has helped address the summer hunger gap by providing meals to groups of kids at schools, parks, libraries, and other community sites. We are thankful for the incredible work of site sponsors to keep this critical service running during the summer. This year, thanks to bi-partisan Congressional action, USDA is thrilled to also offer a new federal program to support students in the summer months, Summer EBT, also called SUN Bucks. This means eligible children across Pennsylvania can still enjoy free summer meals at sponsored sites and their families can also receive $120 per child to purchase groceries over the summer. Providing families with this extra support helps lower costs for families and advance our goals of improving child health and well-being,” said Kumar Chandran, USDA Food, Nutrition, and Consumer Services Acting Under Secretary

“Summertime should be a time for parents and caregivers to let out a sigh and begin enjoying the slower pace of summer schedules. Unfortunately, for far too many families, the end of the school causes worry about having enough food dollars to cover the additional meals provided during the school year,” said Jean Falk, Registered Dietician, Nutritional Development Services of the Archdiocese. “Nutritional Development Services is grateful to partner with other sponsors such as the School District of Philadelphia, Philadelphia Parks & Recreation, and the Philadelphia Housing Authority to assist families with easy access to healthy food at summer meal sites throughout the city.”

“As a dairy farmer, I care deeply about providing high-quality, nutritious dairy products to our community,” said Kacie Hershey, a Dairy Farmer at Ar-Joy Farms in Chester County, Pennsylvania. “So many students rely on student meals, not only during the school year but during summer. This is a great way to connect with students and answer their questions about where their food comes from.”

A full list and finder of student meal sites for summer, pantries, meal sites, and older adult meal sites can be found at phila.gov/food. Interested families can also text “FOOD” or “COMIDA” to 304-304 to receive a text with the 3 closest meal sites.

Open Application Period for New $20 Million Program to Provide Laptops for Libraries, Non-Profits, & Community Institutions Across Pennsylvania

Application
(Photo: File/Pexels)

The $20 million Digital Connectivity Technology Program, which will distribute laptops to community institutions to help connect Pennsylvanians who lack digital technology, will accept applications beginning June 20 through August 19.

Harrisburg, PA – Today, Pennsylvania Broadband Development Authority (PBDA) Executive Director Brandon Carson announced that the application period for the new Digital Connectivity Technology Program will be open beginning Thursday, June 20 through Monday, August 19, 2024. Online applications can be made through the PBDA website starting June 20.

Through the new program, the PBDA will purchase and distribute $20 million in laptops for eligible public-facing institutions such as libraries, municipalities, workforce training organizations, not-for-profit organizations, and other community anchor institutions located in areas where affordability has been identified as a barrier to broadband adoption and use who will then make them available to individuals who lack the technology needed to access the internet.

The PBDA will begin reviewing Digital Connectivity Technology Program applications on August 20 and anticipates announcing the grant awards in November. Projects are expected to begin in early 2025. Grant recipients are required to make digital skills training available through their own program or the free options on the PBDA website, however end users are not required to participate in a training program.

“We are working hard to provide the resources Pennsylvanians need to make ‘internet for all’ a reality across the Commonwealth,” said Executive Director Brandon CarsonThe Digital Connectivity Technology Program will provide libraries and other community institutions with the technology required to give Pennsylvanians the internet access they need to have better health, education, and economic outcomes.”

Across Pennsylvania there are currently 286,000 households, businesses, schools, and libraries that either have no access or insufficient access to broadband. The funding for the Digital Connectivity Technology Program was made available through the American Rescue Plan Capital Projects Funding, announced by the PBDA in March 2024.

Through the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) Program the Commonwealth will receive more than $1.16 billion in federal funding to expand broadband in unserved and underserved areas to make sure every Pennsylvanian has access to affordable, high-speed internet. In May, the PBDA received federal approval of its Volume II BEAD Initial Proposal, an important step forward in Pennsylvania’s efforts to invest $1.16 billion in federal funding. The Volume II BEAD Initial Proposal outlines the Commonwealth’s plan to expand internet service for unserved and underserved Pennsylvanians.

In addition to the Digital Connectivity Technology Program and BEAD funding, the Commonwealth also received:

  • $204 million in funding through the Capital Projects Fund Broadband Infrastructure Program to connect unserved/underserved areas, and
  • $45 million through the Multi-Purpose Community Facilities Program for community projects to construct, acquire, or improve facilities that are open to the public and will directly enable work, education, and health monitoring.

These significant investments are providing the Shapiro Administration with the resources it needs to connect Pennsylvanians to the internet and ensure that no matter where they live across the Commonwealth, they can go to school, start and grow businesses, and access telemedicine.

For a detailed look at the Digital Connectivity Technology Program, please view this helpful program overview and this video presentation.

Visit the Pennsylvania Broadband Development Authority’s website to learn more about its work to close the digital divide in the Commonwealth.  

La mayoría de estadounidenses, incluidos los latinos, supuestamente apoyarían una deportación masiva

deportación
Decenas de inmigrantes esperan en la calle donde duermen en las afueras de la Iglesia de Sagrado Corazón de Jesús, en la ciudad de El Paso, Texas (EE. UU.). (Foto: EFE/Jonathan Fernández/Archivo)

Según una encuesta de la firma YouGov para CBS News, la mayoría de ciudadanos de Estados Unidos, incluidos aquellos de origen latino, apoyan una deportación masiva de inmigrantes indocumentados.

Entre los latinos, un 53 % apoyaría una deportación masiva, por un 47 % que se declara en contra.

Entre los blancos el apoyo sube al 67 % por un 33 % de oposición, mientras que los negros son el único grupo demográfico que con un margen menor pues el 53 % se opone a la medida.

La encuesta se realizó entre el 5 y el 7 de junio a 1.615 votantes registrados y tiene un margen de error de +/- 3,8 puntos.

El expresidente y candidato republicano a la Casa Blanca, Donald Trump (2017 – 2021), ha prometido en campaña llevar a cabo la «mayor deportación» de migrantes de la historia del país si regresa al poder tras las elecciones del próximo 5 de noviembre, y para ello usaría a la policía local.

Mientras tanto, este martes, el Gobierno de Joe Biden ha anunciado un plan que permitirá regularizar a más de medio millón de migrantes que viven en el país sin un estatus legal, beneficiando principalmente a las personas casadas con ciudadanos estadounidenses que podrían acceder a una residencia permanente si tienen mas de 10 años viviendo en el país y están casados con un ciudadano estadounidense.

Safety Reminders in Advance of Extreme Heat Wave

Mujer con calor caminando en calles de Filadelfia - Foto Ilustrativa - PlanetaLogo

Harrisburg, PA – The Shapiro Administration is encouraging Pennsylvanians to take the upcoming heat wave seriously and take steps to protect themselves and their loved ones.

“The National Weather Service expects record-breaking temperatures in parts of Pennsylvania over the next week,” said PEMA Director Randy Padfield. “It’s critically important for Pennsylvanians to keep an eye out for and take care of each other, and the Shapiro Administration will be here to support our county partners throughout the coming days.”

The Department of Health stresses the importance of hydrating in the heat and limiting unnecessary physical activity.

“Protecting yourself from heat-related illnesses during a heat wave is crucial as prolonged exposure to high temperatures can lead to heat exhaustion or even heat stroke, which can be life-threatening,” said Acting Secretary of Health Dr. Debra Bogen. “Typical symptoms of heat-related illness include headache, nausea, dizziness, heavy sweating, thirst, and irritability. During a heat wave, residents should stay hydrated by drinking plenty of water, seeking shade or air-conditioned spaces during the hottest parts of the day, and wearing lightweight, light-colored clothing to help regulate body temperature. Taking these precautions can significantly reduce the risk of heat-related illnesses and ensure a safer and more enjoyable summer.”

For additional information on how to prevent heat-related illnesses or identify heat-related symptoms, visit the Department of Health’s webpage. Older adults are especially susceptible to the intense heat.

“We should all take the necessary steps to keep cool during extreme heat, especially older adults who are at higher risk for heat-related illnesses or more. They may not have access to fans, air conditioners, or may have limited mobility to get relief from the heat, so it’s important that all of us check on our older family members, neighbors and friends to make sure they have what they need to stay cool,” said Secretary of Aging Jason Kavulich. “Pennsylvania’s 52 Area Agencies on Aging are a great local resource for older adults to learn about senior community centers acting as cooling stations in their neighborhood and other ways to beat the heat. We urge older adults to also check with their local municipality to discover any libraries, churches or other facilities that are welcoming people to keep cool.”

Older adults can visit the Department of Aging’s website to find their local Area Agency on Aging.

Farmers and pet owners should also be mindful of heat-related dangers.

«When temperatures climb, animals are also at risk for heat stress,» Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding said. «Whether you are a farmer or a pet owner, make sure your animals have access to shade and plenty of clean, cool water.»

Secretary Redding provided additional tips to keep pets and livestock safe:

  • Never leave pets in a hot car. They can suffocate in minutes.
  • Walk dogs in early morning or late evening, when temperatures are cooler.
  • Provide shade – move animals to shaded areas if possible.
  • Provide water – as temperatures rise, animals need to drink more water.
  • Provide fans for air movement where animals are housed. Fans and sprinklers work together for quicker, more effective cooling.
  • Avoid overworking livestock – it’s safest to work livestock early in the morning when their body temperatures are lower.
  • Save routine animal care that can be stressful — such as nail- or hoof-trimming — until the weather cools.
  • Avoid unnecessary transportation. If livestock must be moved, do so in the late evening or early morning.

El número de niños muertos en conflictos se triplicó en 2023, denuncia Naciones Unidas

niños
Un menor entre los escombros de un edificio bombardeado en Rafah, Palestina. (Foto: EFE/Str)

Antonio Broto

Ginebra.– El número de niños fallecidos en conflictos globales se triplicó en 2023 con respecto al año anterior, y el de mujeres se duplicó, denunció este martes el alto comisionado de la ONU para derechos humanos, Volker Türk, en su actualización sobre la situación de las libertades fundamentales en el planeta.

En total, las víctimas civiles en los múltiples conflictos que asolan el planeta en lugares como Gaza, Ucrania, Sudán, Birmania, Siria o el Yemen, entre otros muchos, creció un 72 %, indicó Türk en la apertura de la 56ª sesión del Consejo de Derechos Humanos, citando estadísticas de la oficina que él dirige.

«Es descorazonador ver cómo las distintas partes en conflicto superan los límites de lo aceptable y legal en muchos frentes, con un total menosprecio hacia el otro, pisoteando los derechos humanos», aseguró el jefe de derechos humanos ante las delegaciones de los Estados miembros de Naciones Unidas.

Ante ello, «el asesinato de civiles se ha vuelto una rutina diaria, así como la destrucción de infraestructuras. Niños a los que se les dispara, hospitales bombardeados, artillería pesada contra comunidades enteras», denunció.

Gaza

Türk puso como primer ejemplo de estos abusos la situación en Gaza, donde recordó que 120.000 personas han muerto o han resultado heridas en ocho meses de ataques israelíes.

«Los implacables ataques en Gaza están causando un inmenso sufrimiento y una generalizada destrucción, y continúa la arbitraria obstrucción a la ayuda humanitaria. Israel sigue deteniendo de forma arbitraria a miles de palestinos. Esto no puede continuar», señaló Türk, recordando que los informes de la ONU indican que Israel y Hamás podrían estar cometiendo crímenes de guerra.

El austríaco también subrayó que desde que en mayo Israel intensificara sus operaciones en Rafah, en el extremo sur de la Franja de Gaza y último refugio para muchos palestinos que dejaron sus hogares en zonas más al norte, «más de un millón de palestinos han tenido forzosamente que desplazarse una vez más».

Ucrania

En la guerra de Ucrania, el alto comisionado expresó su preocupación por el deterioro de la situación del país tras dos años y medio de invasión rusa y particularmente denunció la situación en Járkov, donde la reciente ofensiva terrestre rusa «ha destruido comunidades enteras».

«Muchos habitantes, en su mayoría ancianos, se esconden en los sótanos, sin electricidad, agua o adecuados alimentos, mientras la zona sufre intensos ataques con explosivos», destacó el austríaco.

Türk recordó además que las reiteradas olas de ataques a gran escala por parte de Rusia contra infraestructura energética han destruido el 68 % de la capacidad de producción eléctrica de Ucrania, «colocando el sistema en un punto de no retorno, especialmente de cara al invierno».

Otros frentes

Pero Türk aludió también a otros conflictos menos presentes en los titulares y las televisiones, en lugares como el Sahel, la República Democrática del Congo, Siria, Haití o Sudán, país este último que según el alto comisionado «está siendo destruido ante nuestros ojos».

Los generales al frente de los dos bandos en conflicto en Sudán «tienen responsabilidad en la comisión de posibles crímenes de guerra y otras atrocidades», incluidos ataques por motivos étnicos y violencia sexual, aseguró.

«Son responsables últimos del impacto de sus acciones en civiles, con efectos tales como desplazamiento masivo, la amenaza de hambruna, o un desastre humanitario cada vez mayor», señaló el alto comisionado.

A otros niveles que aún no llegan al de conflicto abierto, Türk alertó también este martes sobre los discursos «que convierten a los migrantes en chivos expiatorios», algo que en su opinión se ha vuelto común «entre populistas y extrema derecha» en campañas electorales de Europa, Norteamérica y otras regiones.

También denunció retrocesos en la situación de mujeres y niñas de diversos países, con flagrantes ejemplos en Irán y Afganistán, donde ellas sufren graves violaciones de sus libertades fundamentales.

When colleges close, students are left scrambling. Some never go back to school

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Rising sophomore Cyrus Nasib, 18, stands outside Dorrance Hamilton Hall at the University of the Arts, Friday, June 14, 2024, in Philadelphia. The closure of the university has left some 1,300 other students scrambling to find somewhere to go or something to do. (Photo: AP/Joe Lamberti)

PHILADELPHIA. — Katherine Anderson trekked from Texas to Philadelphia last year for a college program she couldn’t find anywhere else, combining the music business, entrepreneurship and technology. Two weeks ago, she received the startling news the university would be shutting down within days.

The closure of the University of the Arts has left her and 1,300 other students scrambling to find somewhere to go or something to do.

By the time the school announced its closure, many colleges had already cut off admissions for the fall. Anderson was accepted into the music industry program at nearby Drexel University, which she said wasn’t a perfect match, but “the next best thing, I guess.”

“Because of all that’s going on, I felt very pressured to make a decision as fast as possible,” Anderson said. She is now suing the University of the Arts.

More colleges around the country have been closing as they cope with steep declines in enrollment, a consequence of both changing demographics and the effects of the pandemic. The closures in recent years have left tens of thousands of students in limbo — and at increased risk of never finishing their degrees at all.

Rising sophomore Cyrus Nasib, 18, sits on the steps of Dorrance Hamilton Hall at the University of the Arts, Friday, June 14, 2024, in Philadelphia. Students at the university were thrown into panic mode two weeks ago, as they got the startling news that their school would be shutting down within days. The increase in closures of more colleges around the country in recent years has left tens of thousands of students in limbo — and at increased risk of never finishing their degrees at all. (Photo: AP/Joe Lamberti)

Nationwide, private colleges have been closing at a rate of about two per month, according to the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association.

Before announcing it would close, UArts, as it’s often called, had trained musicians and artists, dancers and designers in Philadelphia for nearly 150 years. The school had suffered from plunging enrollment and said it was confronted with “significant, unanticipated expenses” that forced its closure. Several state and local investigations are underway into how the university ran out of money so suddenly.

“We have yet to receive the answer to that question,” Lynette Kuhn, a high-ranking official in the Pennsylvania Department of Education, said Friday in an online information session for University of the Arts parents and students. Kuhn was responding to one of several questions posed by frustrated students about what university officials knew of its precarious finances — and what they did about it.

Signs and writing denouncing the closure of the University of the Arts are seen at Dorrance Hamilton Hall on Friday, June 14, 2024, in Philadelphia. The closure of the university has left some 1,300 students scrambling to find somewhere to go or something to do. (Photo: AP/Joe Lamberti)

“We understand that you students … face an impossible set of circumstances, with frustration that expands beyond measure,” Heather Perfetti, president of the Middle States Commission on Higher Education, an accrediting agency, said at the same session. “We all believe that no academic journey should include this kind of severe and abrupt disruption.”

Signs and writing denouncing the closure of the University of the Arts are pictured at Dorrance Hamilton Hall on Friday, June 14, 2024, in Philadelphia. (Photo: AP/Joe Lamberti)

Drummer Adam Machado, 18, came to the University of the Arts from New York’s Hudson Valley so he could study a range of styles, including jazz and contemporary, in a major city. He had a $32,000-a-year scholarship, and it’s unclear if any other schools will match that. But he also wonders if he’ll find the same curriculum, sense of community and ability to pursue gigs in both New York and Philadelphia, where he performed Wednesday night with a band called “Kids That Fly.”

He grieves for “not only me, but 1,000 other artists (who) are without a home.”

Like many classmates who went through the draining college search process just a year ago, he’s not sure what he’ll do next.

“You don’t really know where to start,” said student Cyrus Nasib, 18.

“It’s very numbing,” said Nasib, a theater major who had just signed a lease for an apartment near the college campus, since his parents are moving from the Philadelphia suburbs to the West Coast. “It kind of just saps your motivation to do anything.”

Enrollment at the University of Arts had dropped by nearly half since 2009. Nationwide, the number of college students in the U.S. had already been steadily decreasing for years before the pandemic led to a sharp drop in enrollment. Schools’ financial woes have been complicated further by the botched rollout of a new federal financial aid form, which has raised fears that hundreds of thousands of students will forgo college entirely.

Rising sophomore Ian Callaghan-Kenna, 19, sits on the steps of Dorrance Hamilton Hall at the University of the Arts, Friday, June 14, 2024, in Philadelphia. Students at the university were thrown into panic mode two weeks ago, as they got the startling news that their school would be shutting down within days. Callaghan-Kenna, a film major, who commuted by bus to the university, has been coping with bouts of intense anxiety — not least because the college already has thousands of dollars of his federal aid for the fall term. He has joined a potential class-action lawsuit against the school. (Photo: AP/Joe Lamberti)

The University of the Arts has made arrangements with a half-dozen colleges and universities to take in UArts students and help them complete their degrees. Formal agreements with a half-dozen other schools are under review by the school’s accrediting agency.

But the disruptions created by college closures have a history of derailing students’ educations.

Nationally, as many as half of students whose campuses close don’t resume their studies, according to the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association, whose data surveys both nonprofit and for-profit schools, including two-year colleges. Other students lose credits or have to spend more to enroll elsewhere.

Democratic state lawmakers held a hearing Monday on the University of the Arts shutdown, while the Philadelphia city council plans its own hearing for later this month.

Rising sophomore Michael Pacio Ximio, 19, sits on the steps of Dorrance Hamilton Hall at the University of the Arts, Friday, June 14, 2024, in Philadelphia. Students at the university were thrown into panic mode two weeks ago, as they got the startling news that their school would be shutting down within days. (Photo: AP/Joe Lamberti)

“It throws so many red flags up,” said Councilman Mark Squilla. “How can the board not be aware of the financial situation and then say, ‘We just found out last minute we couldn’t get any money.’ Were they already leveraged to the hilt? Did they have a line of credit that they can no longer borrow from? Did the banks shut them off? You know, all these questions, nobody’s answering.”

Film major Ian Callaghan-Kenna, who commuted by bus to the University of the Arts, has been coping with bouts of intense anxiety — not least because the college already has thousands of dollars of his federal aid for the fall term. He has joined a potential class-action lawsuit against the school.

Rising sophomore Cyrus Nasib, 18, sits outside Dorrance Hamilton Hall at the University of the Arts, Friday, June 14, 2024, in Philadelphia. Students at the university were thrown into panic mode two weeks ago, as they got the startling news that their school would be shutting down within days. The increase in closures of more colleges around the country in recent years has left tens of thousands of students in limbo — and at increased risk of never finishing their degrees at all. (Photo: AP/Joe Lamberti)

He said he’s most upset by how quickly it happened.

“The fact that they acted like everything was normal and that we were a thriving institution just a couple weeks ago, and now they’re just all the sudden $40 million in the tank, having to shut down,” he said, referring to one estimate of the shortfall, “it’s just very, very upsetting.”

Presidenta electa de México pide a EE. UU. y Canadá apoyar planes para atender ola migratoria

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La futura presidenta de México, Claudia Sheinbaum, habla durante una conferencia de prensa en la Ciudad de México, el martes 11 de junio de 2024.

La futura presidenta de México, Claudia Sheinbaum, dice que en su mandato insistirá a EE. UU. y Canadá a formar un plan regional para atender la ola migratoria, y que las acciones deben basarse en la «cooperación para el desarrollo».

CIUDAD DE MÉXICO — La presidenta electa de México, Claudia Sheinbaum, afirmó el lunes que insistirá a Estados Unidos y Canadá para que participen en los planes de cooperación regional para atender la ola migratoria y se mostró a favor de que se abran canales legales para la migración.

Sheinbaum dijo en una conferencia de prensa que seguirá insistiendo para que los gobiernos de Estados Unidos y Canadá entiendan la importancia de la “cooperación para el desarrollo”.

“Hay que atender las causas de la migración y que haya recursos disponibles de Estados Unidos para la cooperación”, indicó la próxima presidenta sin ofrecer detalles.

Sheinbaum se mostró dispuesta a darle continuidad al “Diálogo de Alto Nivel” en materia de seguridad que impulsaron en 2021 el presidente mexicano, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, y su par estadounidense, Joe Biden, para atender los problemas de tráfico de drogas y migración.

En su intervención, la próxima presidenta mexicana también resaltó la importancia de que se “abran los canales legales para la migración”. López Obrador ha pedido reiteradamente a Washington que aumente el número de visas de trabajo para los migrantes.

Hace dos semanas, López Obrador instó a Estados Unidos a llegar a acuerdos para realizar deportaciones directas de migrantes a sus países de origen y evitar que tengan que pasar por México cuando son expulsados.

En ese sentido, el subsecretario de Seguridad Nacional estadounidense, Blas Nuñez-Neto, señaló que Washington estaba en discusiones constantes con gobiernos en todo el hemisferio este y oeste para llegar a acuerdos de repatriación y devolver a los migrantes de la manera más acelerada posible.

Las declaraciones del presidente mexicano y de Nuñez-Neto se dieron luego de que Biden anunciara unas normas para suspender el asilo cada vez que el número de arrestos por cruzar sin autorización legal alcance los 2.500 en un solo día. La suspensión permanecerá hasta que el número de arrestos caiga debajo de un promedio diario de 1.500 durante siete días.

Actualmente México acepta a los mexicanos que han sido deportados y hasta unos 30.000 cubanos, haitianos, nicaragüenses y venezolanos repatriados al mes, un compromiso que asumió en 2023 cuando el gobierno de Biden puso en vigor otra norma que también endurecía los requisitos para obtener asilo.

Desde finales del año pasado, las autoridades mexicanas han intensificado las detenciones de migrantes en el marco de un acuerdo al que llegaron Washington y México para hacer frente a la ola migratoria.

El Instituto Nacional de Migración dijo el domingo en un comunicado que entre enero y mayo ubicó a 1.393.683 personas extranjeras que viajaban en condición irregular por el territorio mexicano.

La mayor parte provenía de Venezuela (377.401), Guatemala (209.540), Honduras (144.499), Ecuador (136.699) y Haití (107.432), entre otros países.

Por otra parte, Sheinbaum volvió a hacer un llamado a los inversionistas a no preocuparse por la reforma al poder judicial que será discutida en septiembre por el nuevo Congreso, tras difundir los resultados de tres encuestas del partido gobernante Morena en los que la mayoría de consultados apoyaron la controversial iniciativa.

La reforma judicial, que presentó en febrero López Obrador y que prevé que los ministros de la Suprema Corte, magistrados y jueces se elijan por voto popular, ha desatado nerviosismo en los mercados financieros locales en las últimas dos semanas. Durante la sesión del lunes la moneda mexicana volvió a depreciarse y cerró en 18,54 pesos por dólar.