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Item 21 - Assembly Bill 937 (the “VISION Act”)
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Item 21 - Assembly Bill 937 (the “VISION Act”)
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Clerk of the Council
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21
Date
5/4/2021
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AB 937 <br /> Page 9 <br />communities inflicted by ICE that motivated the Legislature to enact SB 54 began long before <br />the Trump administration and still persists today. <br />The recent rise in violence directed at the Asian Pacific Islander (API) Community is the latest <br />development in a long history of bias and violence against marginalized communities, including <br />by abuse of the immigration system. While the media and the public have focused on the recent <br />rise of traumatic and horrendous interpersonal acts of violence against Asian and Pacific Islander <br />American community members, it is also important to also recognize the less discussed large - <br />scale and multi-generational impact of systemic violence against API communities. At such a <br />time, California would be remiss to not reflect on and address its role in the criminalization, <br />family separation, and perpetual punishment of API refugee communities. Southeast Asian <br />refugees have been especially impacted by mass incarceration, ICE transfers, and deportation. <br />U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War and U.S.-led carpet bombing in Southeast Asia caused <br />mass migration of refugees from Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam to California. Southeast Asian <br />refugees who resettled in California were generally housed in poor, hyper-criminalized, and <br />under-resourced neighborhoods with little to no culturally competent support services. Southeast <br />Asian refugee children – like other immigrants -- faced intense bullying. At the same time, all of <br />these youth as well as those who were Black, indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) struggled <br />to survive the 1990s — a decade marked by a proliferation of local and national “tough on <br />crime” policies, including mandatory minimum sentences, the “war on drugs” and sentencing <br />children as adults in criminal proceedings. <br />In 1996, U.S. Congress passed an immigration bill that severely limited immigration relief for <br />non-U.S. citizens with criminal convictions — including refugees and green card holders. By the <br />time Southeast Asian refugee children, whose families survived famine and genocide, were <br />teenagers, the school to prison to deportation pipeline was in full effect. <br />The perfect storm of draconian criminal justice and immigration laws resulted in not only the <br />mass incarceration of the immigrant and BIPOC communities, but also the mass deportation of <br />Central American, South American, and Southeast Asian refugees. Today, Southeast Asian <br />refugees are at least three times more likely to be deported for past convictions than other <br />immigrant communities are. In 2018, at least 16,000 of the 2.7 million Southeast Asians in the <br />United States had received final deportation orders, more than 13,000 of which were based on <br />past criminal records (Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, “U.S. Deportation <br />Outcomes by Charge, Completed Cases in Immigration Courts”, available at <br />http://trac.syr.edu/phptools/immigration/court_backlog/deport_outcome_charge.php ). This <br />means that 80% of the total Southeast Asian deportation orders were linked to old criminal <br />records, compared to 29% of all immigrants with deportation orders. (Ibid) Between 2017 and <br />2018, there was a 279% spike in deportations of Cambodian refugees and a 58% increase in the <br />deportations of Vietnamese refugees (Ibid). <br />This targeting of the Southeast Asian refugee community has continued under the Biden <br />administr ation. On March 15, 2021, the same week as the horrific Atlanta mass shooting that <br />targeted Asian women and during President Biden’s moratorium on deportations, 33 Vietnamese <br />refugee community members were tragically deported. Among those deported were individuals <br />who fought alongside U.S. troops during the Vietnam War. <br />According to a report released just last week by the International Rescue Committee, the United <br />States is on track to accept the fewest refugees this year of any modern president, including
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