Los defensores de Oregón están centrando la atención en el hambre y cuestiones relacionadas, antes de las elecciones de otoño. Un informe reciente de la Iniciativa de Investigación de Inmigrantes encuentra que los inmigrantes constituyen el 10% de la población de Oregón, pero contribuyen al 13% o más de $33.000 millones de la producción económica del estado.
La política "Alimentos para todos los habitantes de Oregón" tiene como objetivo ampliar los beneficios del SNAP a 60.000 habitantes de Oregón que no son elegibles debido a su estatus migratorio.
Karen Caudillo Román, del Oregón Food Bank, destaca que abordar el hambre trasciende la mera provisión de alimentos. Además, enfatiza que entre los más afectados por el hambre en su comunidad se encuentran las madres solteras, los cuidadores y las personas de origen negro, moreno e indígena.
"Estas son personas que ya calificarían para muchos de los programas de la red de seguridad que tenemos implementados, pero sólo por el lugar donde nacieron, quedan excluidos," analizó Caudillo Román.
Insta a la gobernadora Tina Kotek a priorizar la política de 'Alimentos para todos los habitantes de Oregón' en la próxima sesión legislativa, argumentando que el acceso a los alimentos es un derecho humano y que a nadie se le debe negar por su lugar de nacimiento.
Reyna López es directora ejecutiva de PCUN, el Sindicato de Trabajadores Agrícolas de Oregón. Ella insiste en la importancia de amplificar la voz de la comunidad en medio de lo que ella describe como "retórica de odio contra los inmigrantes durante las elecciones" y la explotación continua en el lugar de trabajo.
"Somos parte de esta comunidad y continuaremos haciendo el trabajo que es esencial y cubrimos algunas de esas necesidades urgentes que enfrentan todos los habitantes de Oregón," aseguró también la directora ejecutiva de PCUN.
López dice que su grupo, junto con muchos defensores, se centran en cinco temas específicos para esta elección que incluyen vivienda para todos, un camino hacia la ciudadanía para todos los trabajadores indocumentados, escuelas públicas totalmente financiadas, derechos sindicales para todos los trabajadores y un alto el fuego en Palestina.
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President Donald Trump has repeatedly called the arrival of immigrants an invasion and has invoked the Alien Enemies Act to expedite their removal, including 137 people now in an El Salvador prison.
Last week, a federal judge in Colorado disagreed with Trump's interpretation of the 1798 law and granted a temporary restraining order, halting deportations until May 6.
Tim Macdonald, legal director for the ACLU of Colorado, said the statute does not apply to individuals crossing the U.S. border, even if they were members of a gang.
"The Alien Enemies Act, the statute that grants this wartime power, applies only when there is a declared war, or an invasion, or predatory incursion against the United States by a foreign nation or government," Macdonald outlined.
The decision comes on the heels of other federal court rulings ordering the Trump administration to stop Alien Enemies Act deportations, including the U.S. Supreme Court. Trump has criticized the rulings, claiming activist judges are allowing violent criminals to remain in the country.
Nine in 10 of the people now confined in El Salvador had no criminal record and at least one was removed because of an administrative error. The 10th Circuit judge in Colorado also ruled people cannot be removed without 21 days notice.
Macdonald argued all people in the U.S., regardless of their immigration status, have rights, including access to a judge to review the facts of their case.
"We know they're making mistakes, they've acknowledged they are making mistakes," Macdonald pointed out. "They're life-threatening ones when they send people to a foreign prison where they may never see the light of day again."
Trump told reporters in the Oval Office he also intends to send "homegrown" American citizens to the El Salvador facility. Macdonald says if the administration can successfully deprive people of their basic rights, his future use of the power could become a slippery slope.
"When civil rights are threatened, they're threatened for everybody," Macdonald asserted. "Listeners should be concerned that the government is acting in a lawless way to deprive people of their liberty. And the question is, who's next?"
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Five years after George Floyd's murder by a white police officer sparked nationwide protests and demands for police reform, progress remains slow, including in Washington.
State legislators passed a number of police reforms a year after Floyd's death, including banning chokeholds and "no-knock" raids. One law banning police pursuits was later rolled back. Despite the changes, 2024 was one of the deadliest years for police killings in Washington, with almost 50 deaths.
Dom Campese, communications leader for the Washington Coalition for Police Accountability, said at least 10 cases involved police pursuits.
"We need people to step up to the plate. We need legislators to work with us," Campese urged. "We need law enforcement to work with us, and we can enact sensible alternatives to what's currently happening."
Nationwide, police killed more people in 2024 than any year in more than a decade and Black people have died at disproportionate rates. Research shows most killings by police begin with traffic stops, mental health checks and other nonviolent offenses.
The coalition has been pushing the state to create an Office of Independent Prosecutions to handle officer-involved shootings, rather than leaving charging decisions with local prosecutors. Campese argued the current system is flawed because when cases are reopened, they go back to the same prosecutor who made the initial decision. He believes it creates potential conflicts of interest due to prosecutors' close ties with police.
"We would like to see officers held accountable when they break the law, and when someone ends up dying at their hand," Campese stressed.
The Washington Legislature has approved a plan to provide $100 million to hire more police officers. The bill would also allow local governments to increase the sales tax without voter approval to pay for criminal justice expenses.
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January is National Human Trafficking Prevention Month and educators are training workers in key industries to recognize and report the crime, including energy workers in places like Montana.
Human trafficking is the use of force, fraud or coercion to exploit people for sex or labor.
Lindsey Mattson, director of industry engagement for the group TAT, formerly known as Truckers Against Trafficking, said the industry makes big illicit profits globally, second only to the drug trade.
TAT now trains groups across the transportation sector that are likely to intersect with traffickers including energy workers and people working at truck stops and dealerships.
"We can mobilize millions of people to move from passive bystanders to active disrupters," Mattson explained. "That is really our goal, is to train as many people as possible throughout all transportation industries to truly have an impact on fighting this crime."
Gov. Greg Gianforte and Attorney General Austin Knudsen have prioritized addressing human trafficking in Montana. A 2023 law increased penalties for both traffickers and patrons. The state's Department of Justice worked nearly 130 cases related to trafficking in 2024.
Mattson stressed energy workers are vital eyes and ears on the ground, because they may use the same gas stations and hotels as traffickers. The workers themselves are targeted because they are often stationed in one place.
"They look for concentrations of men housed away from home with purchasing power," Mattson noted. "For the energy industry, something like a work camp or project location."
TAT has trained nearly 2 million professionals to identify and report the crime, including 50,000 energy workers in 43 companies.
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