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What is TIRRC?

TIRRC is a statewide, immigrant and refugee-led collaboration whose mission is to empower immigrants and refugees throughout Tennessee to develop a unified voice, defend their rights, and create an atmosphere in which they are recognized as positive contributors to the state.

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Organize for Reform!

Comprehensive Immigration Reform

Principles of Immigration Reform

As the Administration and Congress prepare to begin debating immigration reform, we urge that the following principles guide our policymakers:

Immigration reform must promote economic opportunity.

We must renew our commitment to helping all low-income Americans improve their job prospects and move up the economic ladder towards the American Dream. Opponents of reform try to pit the needs of native-born workers against immigrants, but our vision of reform is that a rising tide lifts all boats.

Immigrants and citizens working shoulder to shoulder, with the same labor protections, access to programs and services, due process, and faith in a system that works for them and their families, is our vision for a stronger America.

Immigration reform must be comprehensive.

Comprehensive immigration reform would re-commit our country to being both a nation of immigrants and a nation of laws. Unless we reform the broken system as a whole, we will fail to solve the problems at hand.

The necessary components of reform include: (1) improving the economic situation of all workers in the United States; (2) legalizing the status of undocumented immigrants working and living in the United States; (3) reforming visa programs to keep families together, protecting workers’ rights, and ensuring that future immigration is regulated and controlled rather than illegal and chaotic; (4) implementing smart, effective enforcement measures targeted at the worst violators of immigration and labor laws; (5) prioritizing immigrant integration into our communities and country; and (6) respecting the due process rights of all in the USA.

Long-term reform requires long term solutions.

We acknowledge that the factors shaping immigration are not just domestic, and that the issue transcends our borders. As such, how we as a country approach our relationships with other nations matters. We must deal with the domestic aspect of this issue, and work in partnership with other countries over time to develop long-term strategies that improve the economic conditions in regions that supply large numbers of economic migrants. Responsible and accountable approaches in this regard, coupled with improving skills and opportunities for our domestic workforce, will improve the economic outlook for all our communities.

A reform package should include the following...(Click for more)


Interested in getting involved with TIRRC's immigration reform campaign here in Tennessee?

Email: megan@tnimmigrant.org


Click for info on:

Myths about immigrants and immigration in Tennessee

New report on guest worker programs, Close to Slavery, from Southern Poverty Law Center

Daily CIR blog from the Fair Immigration Reform Movement

 

Latest News:

Monday
Jan252010

Get Involved To Help Pass Immigration Reform in 2010!

Date/Time:  Sunday, Jan. 31st from 2:00p-5:00p

Location:      MAS Center, 5217 Linbar Dr., Suite 301, Nashville TN

It is time to come together as an immigrant rights movement and prepare for what promises to be a very busy spring. As most of you know, immigration reform is very likely to be debated in Congress in the next few months. This is an issue that affects nearly everyone in our community, from refugees waiting to reunite with their families to undocumented immigrants eager to move out of the shadows and into a path towards citizenship. 

In order to pass a bill that reflects our values, we will need to invest a lot of time and energy to move our members of Congress. But we can’t do it alone. Community leadership will be the key that opens the door to real, meaningful reform. 

Join us Sunday, January 31st at 2:00pm at the Coleman Center to get involved with the TIRRC campaign to pass immigration reform in 2010! 

RSVP to save a spot!

We encourage anybody who wants to take leadership in their community around immigration reform to attend, and bring other interested friends. 

Light refreshments will be provided.

Questions? Contact us

Tuesday
Dec152009

Immigration Reform Bill Introduced in U.S. House!

Today, Representatives of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, The Congressional Asian and Pacific Americans Caucus, the Congressional Black Caucus, and Congressional Progressive Caucus joined Congressman Luis Gutierrez, to introduce the “Comprehensive Immigration Reform for America’s Security Act and Prosperity” (CIR ASAP) in the House of Representatives. The bill is a step up the legislative ladder, bringing Congress closer to fulfilling the President’s promise to reform the immigration system.

“Today was a big step in the right direction,” said Stephen Fotopulos, executive director of the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition. “Tennesseans want our leaders to solve tough problems. We want practical solutions to our broken immigration system that reflect our best values and uphold our traditions as a nation of fair and sensible laws. Now it’s time for the Senate to act.”

Take Action!
Tell Congress to support the CIR ASAP Act!

If you want to promote phone calls into the White House, please use the numbers below:
English:  866-584-0773
Spanish: 866-974-8813

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Sep162009

Tennessean Editorial Calls For End of 287(g) in Nashville

"Still, many people have taken exception to the 287(g) program here and in other states, and for good reason. The vast majority of people detained under the program have not turned out to be the dangerous criminals the program was supposedly intended to identify. Also, advocates say the program encourages racial profiling, a charge that law enforcement officials have denied....

The Davidson County Sheriff's Department should end its participation in 287(g); the program does more harm than good. And other local law enforcement agencies nationwide should follow suit, letting the federal government know that they cannot be a part of secret arrests, whatever the reason." [emphasis added]

Click to read full editorial

Wednesday
Jul222009

Immigration Reform Cell Phone Action Network

Help win immigration reform THIS YEAR by using your cell phone! We have partnered with the Reform Immigration for America national campaign in an effort to keep local communities in Tennessee up to date with the latest news and action opportunities around immigration reform. Sign up today to stay current on how you can participate in this growing national movement.

Text "justice" to 69866

(All standard texting fees apply)

REPLY to the first text message with your zip code and e-mail. You will receive about one or two messages every week depending on what is happening in the movement.

The messages will be one of the following:

Action alert

News item

Event information

For more information, visit: www.reformimmigrationforamerica.com

To help us get more people signed up, check out this word document.

Thursday
Jun112009

Nashville Joins National Immigration Reform Launch

Press coverage:


Local labor, faith, business, and immigrant leaders from throughout Tennessee gathered today to proclaim their support for immigration reform. As partners of the Reform Immigration FOR America Campaign, a broad-based national effort to fix the broken immigration system through a comprehensive legislative approach, these community leaders demonstrated the diverse coalition that is spearheading the movement for reform.

Avi Poster, president of the Coalition for Education about Immigration, kicked off the event, saying, "comprehensive immigration reform is long overdue, as evidenced by the increasing rancor that has defined national and local conversations about immigration and the regressive ways in which communities have responded to the problems created by our broken national immigration system." He continued, "unfortunately, the absence of reform has given rise to the adoption of local public policies that aggravate rather than solve problems.”

Throughout the conference, speakers kept returning to one central theme: “Immigration is what’s right for the economy, it’s what’s right for our families, and it’s what’s right for America,” said Remziya Suleyman, policy coordinator for the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition.

The Vice-President of Program Service for Community Nashville, Anthony Johnson, added, “America is built on a system of values that embraces everyone. Unfortunately, the current system is an affront to those values, and needs to be reformed immediately.”

Some of the leaders are headed to Washington, D.C. this week as part of a national summit on immigration reform. Coming exactly a week before President Obama holds a top-level meeting about immigration with key Congressional members, the conference and the summit serve as clear indication that there is broad support and building momentum towards reform legislation this year.