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Page 1: Immigration

immigration rally in dc

For Congress: Next Up,ImmigrationBy THE EDITORS | March 22, 2010

Photo by:

DCTWINKIE5500

On the same

day the House

passed the

landmark

health care

bill—

extending

health care

coverage to

more than 30

million

Americans—

tens of thousands of demonstrators rallied on the National Mall Sunday

to re-energize Congress to take up the next volatile issue on the

President’s agenda—immigration reform.

President Barack Obama, who promised to make overhauling the

immigration system a top priority in his first year, sought to reassure

those at the rally with a video message promising to fix a “broken

immigration system.” Even though the President couldn’t actually

change the provisions of the health insurance reform bill that preclude

undocumented immigrants from participating and require a waiting

period for legal immigrants, it was enough to convince Representative

Luis Gutierrez, the Chicago Democrat outspoken in favor of

immigration reform, to vote in favor of health care legislation on March

21st after he had pledged to oppose it because of its immigration

language.

Is the President’s pledge to move on immigration reform enough to

move Congress to act? Will Gutierrez’s hopes—and those of the

demonstrators at the rallies—be fulfilled or dashed in this, the second

year of the Obama Administration? Every nonprofit has a stake in how

our nation deals with immigrants. We at Nonprofit Quarterly dedicated

our Summer 2009 issue to immigration—including articles that take

apart and re-stitch the picture of nonprofits and their service, program,

and advocacy relationships with immigrant populations. We hope you’ll

take a look as you keep an eye on the coming national conversation.

READ NEXT

Nonprofit Newswire | Immigrants Can Cheer and Jeer

for Health Care ReformBy RICK COHEN March 26, 2010

This commentary from a health policy attorney at the national Immigration Law Center in

Los Angeles will hopefully correct some of the misconceptions contained in articles that we

at NPQ may have cited as sources on the treatment and standing of immigrants in the new

health insurance reform legislation passed by the House.

Community Protests as Fannie MaeBacks Affordable Housing Sell-off in …1 comment • 8 days ago

Vince O'Donnell — Spencer Wells shines

a much-needed light on the disconnect

between community-based efforts to …

Single-Family Home Rental: A Sign ofthe Economic Times

1 comment • 15 days ago

heyjp — One very important issue and big

concern about SFR investors is that rent

revenue leaves the community. Local …

Some Reasons behind SocietalNeglect of Rural Poverty—and Rural …1 comment • 4 days ago

John Abell — This article raises a number

of useful points. However, one of them--

the assertion that there is a "higher rate …

Do 9 out of 10 Nonprofits Fail as BenCarson Asserts? No, Says …2 comments • 8 days ago

iMission Institute — Fail at what? Every

nonprofit is hard at work building and

harnessing the social capital and …

ALSO ON NONPROFIT QUARTERLY

2 Comments Nonprofit Quarterly Lo…1

Share Sort by Best

Join the discussion…

• Reply •

rick cohen • 6 years ago

Dear Jason: This was actually one of the issues that motivated us to do the special

edition of NPQ on immmigration. We came across Senator Max Baucus's adamant

statements about excluding "illegal" immigrants struck us as over-the-top and

pandering to the anti-immigrant populace. As the Guardian (from the UK!) said

yesterday, the exclusion of undocumented immigrants was the "price" that Congress

and the White House were willing to pay to keep the "yes" votes of Democrats in

states such as Texas, which routinely denies much aid to undocumented immigrants

and legal immigrants alike (http://www.guardian.co.uk/worl.... The final bill I

believe prevents undocumented immigrants from purchasing health insurance on

the insurance exchanges even if they use their own money. Then we came across

the provisions in earlier versions of the bill that mandated a waiting period even for

legal immigrants. I believe that the final bill still has a waiting period to be eligible

for Medicaid for legal immigrants, I don't know about its treatment of legal

immigrants regarding other kinds of subsidized or mandated health insurance.

That's why I had some respect for Gutierrez's position on the heinous, anti-

immigrant provisions of the health care legislation. I am truly disappointed in our

nation's leadership in its willingness to ignore the needs and rights of immigrants

when it comes to health insurance. It's odd that this was a prime motivation behind

the NPQ immigration edition--and now the federal government's provisions on

immigrants and health care are close to being enshrined into law.

• Reply •

Jason Feldman • 6 years ago

Ironically enough, the badly needed Immigration reform is probably tied into the

passage of a health care bill. A central issue of the health care and immigration bill is

where do illegal immigrants fit in? People here illegally will continue to work

regardless. It just makes sense for them to obtain some sort of status and pay taxes,

social security, medicaid, etc. Moreover, our economy needs both educated and

uneducated foreign workers to survive. Both contribute to the economy. The

educated workers fill gaps in the sectors where we have dramatic shortages of

qualified workers like the IT and health care field. Hard working uneducated

workers still promote the economy as their taxes and earnings (even if some gets

sent home) ultimately is reinvested in the U.S economy. Any economist will tell you

the free flow of labor is essential to maximize production and output. And after all

we are all immigrants at one time or another.

-Jason Feldman, Attorney at Law

http://www.immigrateme.com

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John Godfrey

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NEWS PHILANTHROPY MANAGEMENT GOVERNANCEFUNDRAISING POLICY OPINION RESOURCES

Nonprofits should be

Cautious with “FunRun” Vendors: AnotherNational Scam Exposed

1

Stories of those

Homeless Who Don’t Fitthe “Housing First”Model

2

Looking Back at the

War on Poverty: A

Conversation with

Sheldon Danziger

3

Nativism Surges while

President’s ExecutiveAction on Immigration

Stalls

4

IRS Commissioner

Koskinen on 501(c)(4)

Regulations: No

Timeline

5

�We scour the web for the latest

news that applies to the nonprofit

sector.

Get NPQ's free newsletter today!

Sign up for NPQ's daily newsletter here:

Email

Submit

� � � � �

Donate Now GO� � � � � Search Donate Now �� � � � �

NEWS PHILANTHROPY MANAGEMENT GOVERNANCEFUNDRAISING POLICY OPINION MORE

SHARE � � � FOLLOW �Immigration � The Editors

Generated with www.html-to-pdf.net Page 1 / 4

Page 2: Immigration

immigration rally in dc

For Congress: Next Up,ImmigrationBy THE EDITORS | March 22, 2010

Photo by:

DCTWINKIE5500

On the same

day the House

passed the

landmark

health care

bill—

extending

health care

coverage to

more than 30

million

Americans—

tens of thousands of demonstrators rallied on the National Mall Sunday

to re-energize Congress to take up the next volatile issue on the

President’s agenda—immigration reform.

President Barack Obama, who promised to make overhauling the

immigration system a top priority in his first year, sought to reassure

those at the rally with a video message promising to fix a “broken

immigration system.” Even though the President couldn’t actually

change the provisions of the health insurance reform bill that preclude

undocumented immigrants from participating and require a waiting

period for legal immigrants, it was enough to convince Representative

Luis Gutierrez, the Chicago Democrat outspoken in favor of

immigration reform, to vote in favor of health care legislation on March

21st after he had pledged to oppose it because of its immigration

language.

Is the President’s pledge to move on immigration reform enough to

move Congress to act? Will Gutierrez’s hopes—and those of the

demonstrators at the rallies—be fulfilled or dashed in this, the second

year of the Obama Administration? Every nonprofit has a stake in how

our nation deals with immigrants. We at Nonprofit Quarterly dedicated

our Summer 2009 issue to immigration—including articles that take

apart and re-stitch the picture of nonprofits and their service, program,

and advocacy relationships with immigrant populations. We hope you’ll

take a look as you keep an eye on the coming national conversation.

READ NEXT

Nonprofit Newswire | Immigrants Can Cheer and Jeer

for Health Care ReformBy RICK COHEN March 26, 2010

This commentary from a health policy attorney at the national Immigration Law Center in

Los Angeles will hopefully correct some of the misconceptions contained in articles that we

at NPQ may have cited as sources on the treatment and standing of immigrants in the new

health insurance reform legislation passed by the House.

Community Protests as Fannie MaeBacks Affordable Housing Sell-off in …1 comment • 8 days ago

Vince O'Donnell — Spencer Wells shines

a much-needed light on the disconnect

between community-based efforts to …

Single-Family Home Rental: A Sign ofthe Economic Times

1 comment • 15 days ago

heyjp — One very important issue and big

concern about SFR investors is that rent

revenue leaves the community. Local …

Some Reasons behind SocietalNeglect of Rural Poverty—and Rural …1 comment • 4 days ago

John Abell — This article raises a number

of useful points. However, one of them--

the assertion that there is a "higher rate …

Do 9 out of 10 Nonprofits Fail as BenCarson Asserts? No, Says …2 comments • 8 days ago

iMission Institute — Fail at what? Every

nonprofit is hard at work building and

harnessing the social capital and …

ALSO ON NONPROFIT QUARTERLY

2 Comments Nonprofit Quarterly Lo…1

Share Sort by Best

Join the discussion…

• Reply •

rick cohen • 6 years ago

Dear Jason: This was actually one of the issues that motivated us to do the special

edition of NPQ on immmigration. We came across Senator Max Baucus's adamant

statements about excluding "illegal" immigrants struck us as over-the-top and

pandering to the anti-immigrant populace. As the Guardian (from the UK!) said

yesterday, the exclusion of undocumented immigrants was the "price" that Congress

and the White House were willing to pay to keep the "yes" votes of Democrats in

states such as Texas, which routinely denies much aid to undocumented immigrants

and legal immigrants alike (http://www.guardian.co.uk/worl.... The final bill I

believe prevents undocumented immigrants from purchasing health insurance on

the insurance exchanges even if they use their own money. Then we came across

the provisions in earlier versions of the bill that mandated a waiting period even for

legal immigrants. I believe that the final bill still has a waiting period to be eligible

for Medicaid for legal immigrants, I don't know about its treatment of legal

immigrants regarding other kinds of subsidized or mandated health insurance.

That's why I had some respect for Gutierrez's position on the heinous, anti-

immigrant provisions of the health care legislation. I am truly disappointed in our

nation's leadership in its willingness to ignore the needs and rights of immigrants

when it comes to health insurance. It's odd that this was a prime motivation behind

the NPQ immigration edition--and now the federal government's provisions on

immigrants and health care are close to being enshrined into law.

• Reply •

Jason Feldman • 6 years ago

Ironically enough, the badly needed Immigration reform is probably tied into the

passage of a health care bill. A central issue of the health care and immigration bill is

where do illegal immigrants fit in? People here illegally will continue to work

regardless. It just makes sense for them to obtain some sort of status and pay taxes,

social security, medicaid, etc. Moreover, our economy needs both educated and

uneducated foreign workers to survive. Both contribute to the economy. The

educated workers fill gaps in the sectors where we have dramatic shortages of

qualified workers like the IT and health care field. Hard working uneducated

workers still promote the economy as their taxes and earnings (even if some gets

sent home) ultimately is reinvested in the U.S economy. Any economist will tell you

the free flow of labor is essential to maximize production and output. And after all

we are all immigrants at one time or another.

-Jason Feldman, Attorney at Law

http://www.immigrateme.com

WHAT'S THIS?

Subscribe✉ Add Disqus to your sited Privacy

Recommend

Share ›

Share ›

Spencer Wells

Spencer's posts

Martin Levine

Martin's posts

Amy Butcher

Amy's posts

Larry Kaplan

Larry's posts

Michael Wyland

Michael's posts

Patricia Schaefer

Patricia's posts

jeanne allen

Jeanne's posts

Debbie Laskey

Debbie's posts

John Godfrey

John's posts

Kari Thierer

Kari's posts

Meredith Betz

Meredith's posts

Erin Lamb

Erin's posts

POPULAR POSTS

Subscription includes a weekly note from NPQ's

Editor-in-Chief

Write for NPQ

NEWSWIRE WRITERS

ABOUT

ADVERTISE

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

FOUNDATIONS ANDFUNDERS

EDITORIAL ADVISORYBOARD

NPQ STAFF

CONTACT US

DONORS

NEWSLETTERS

COPYRIGHT POLICY

PRIVACY POLICY

© Copyright 2015, Nonprofit Quarterly

Copyright Policy Privacy Policy

Built with the Largo WordPress Theme from the Institute for Nonprofit News.

SUBSCRIBE

GIVE A GIFT

RENEW/CHANGE SUBSCRIPTION

NEWS PHILANTHROPY MANAGEMENT GOVERNANCEFUNDRAISING POLICY OPINION RESOURCES

Nonprofits should be

Cautious with “FunRun” Vendors: AnotherNational Scam Exposed

1

Stories of those

Homeless Who Don’t Fitthe “Housing First”Model

2

Looking Back at the

War on Poverty: A

Conversation with

Sheldon Danziger

3

Nativism Surges while

President’s ExecutiveAction on Immigration

Stalls

4

IRS Commissioner

Koskinen on 501(c)(4)

Regulations: No

Timeline

5

�We scour the web for the latest

news that applies to the nonprofit

sector.

Get NPQ's free newsletter today!

Sign up for NPQ's daily newsletter here:

Email

Submit

� � � � �

Donate Now GO� � � � � Search Donate Now �� � � � �

NEWS PHILANTHROPY MANAGEMENT GOVERNANCEFUNDRAISING POLICY OPINION MORE

SHARE � � � FOLLOW �Immigration � The Editors

Generated with www.html-to-pdf.net Page 2 / 4

Page 3: Immigration

immigration rally in dc

For Congress: Next Up,ImmigrationBy THE EDITORS | March 22, 2010

Photo by:

DCTWINKIE5500

On the same

day the House

passed the

landmark

health care

bill—

extending

health care

coverage to

more than 30

million

Americans—

tens of thousands of demonstrators rallied on the National Mall Sunday

to re-energize Congress to take up the next volatile issue on the

President’s agenda—immigration reform.

President Barack Obama, who promised to make overhauling the

immigration system a top priority in his first year, sought to reassure

those at the rally with a video message promising to fix a “broken

immigration system.” Even though the President couldn’t actually

change the provisions of the health insurance reform bill that preclude

undocumented immigrants from participating and require a waiting

period for legal immigrants, it was enough to convince Representative

Luis Gutierrez, the Chicago Democrat outspoken in favor of

immigration reform, to vote in favor of health care legislation on March

21st after he had pledged to oppose it because of its immigration

language.

Is the President’s pledge to move on immigration reform enough to

move Congress to act? Will Gutierrez’s hopes—and those of the

demonstrators at the rallies—be fulfilled or dashed in this, the second

year of the Obama Administration? Every nonprofit has a stake in how

our nation deals with immigrants. We at Nonprofit Quarterly dedicated

our Summer 2009 issue to immigration—including articles that take

apart and re-stitch the picture of nonprofits and their service, program,

and advocacy relationships with immigrant populations. We hope you’ll

take a look as you keep an eye on the coming national conversation.

READ NEXT

Nonprofit Newswire | Immigrants Can Cheer and Jeer

for Health Care ReformBy RICK COHEN March 26, 2010

This commentary from a health policy attorney at the national Immigration Law Center in

Los Angeles will hopefully correct some of the misconceptions contained in articles that we

at NPQ may have cited as sources on the treatment and standing of immigrants in the new

health insurance reform legislation passed by the House.

Community Protests as Fannie MaeBacks Affordable Housing Sell-off in …1 comment • 8 days ago

Vince O'Donnell — Spencer Wells shines

a much-needed light on the disconnect

between community-based efforts to …

Single-Family Home Rental: A Sign ofthe Economic Times

1 comment • 15 days ago

heyjp — One very important issue and big

concern about SFR investors is that rent

revenue leaves the community. Local …

Some Reasons behind SocietalNeglect of Rural Poverty—and Rural …1 comment • 4 days ago

John Abell — This article raises a number

of useful points. However, one of them--

the assertion that there is a "higher rate …

Do 9 out of 10 Nonprofits Fail as BenCarson Asserts? No, Says …2 comments • 8 days ago

iMission Institute — Fail at what? Every

nonprofit is hard at work building and

harnessing the social capital and …

ALSO ON NONPROFIT QUARTERLY

2 Comments Nonprofit Quarterly Lo…1

Share Sort by Best

Join the discussion…

• Reply •

rick cohen • 6 years ago

Dear Jason: This was actually one of the issues that motivated us to do the special

edition of NPQ on immmigration. We came across Senator Max Baucus's adamant

statements about excluding "illegal" immigrants struck us as over-the-top and

pandering to the anti-immigrant populace. As the Guardian (from the UK!) said

yesterday, the exclusion of undocumented immigrants was the "price" that Congress

and the White House were willing to pay to keep the "yes" votes of Democrats in

states such as Texas, which routinely denies much aid to undocumented immigrants

and legal immigrants alike (http://www.guardian.co.uk/worl.... The final bill I

believe prevents undocumented immigrants from purchasing health insurance on

the insurance exchanges even if they use their own money. Then we came across

the provisions in earlier versions of the bill that mandated a waiting period even for

legal immigrants. I believe that the final bill still has a waiting period to be eligible

for Medicaid for legal immigrants, I don't know about its treatment of legal

immigrants regarding other kinds of subsidized or mandated health insurance.

That's why I had some respect for Gutierrez's position on the heinous, anti-

immigrant provisions of the health care legislation. I am truly disappointed in our

nation's leadership in its willingness to ignore the needs and rights of immigrants

when it comes to health insurance. It's odd that this was a prime motivation behind

the NPQ immigration edition--and now the federal government's provisions on

immigrants and health care are close to being enshrined into law.

• Reply •

Jason Feldman • 6 years ago

Ironically enough, the badly needed Immigration reform is probably tied into the

passage of a health care bill. A central issue of the health care and immigration bill is

where do illegal immigrants fit in? People here illegally will continue to work

regardless. It just makes sense for them to obtain some sort of status and pay taxes,

social security, medicaid, etc. Moreover, our economy needs both educated and

uneducated foreign workers to survive. Both contribute to the economy. The

educated workers fill gaps in the sectors where we have dramatic shortages of

qualified workers like the IT and health care field. Hard working uneducated

workers still promote the economy as their taxes and earnings (even if some gets

sent home) ultimately is reinvested in the U.S economy. Any economist will tell you

the free flow of labor is essential to maximize production and output. And after all

we are all immigrants at one time or another.

-Jason Feldman, Attorney at Law

http://www.immigrateme.com

WHAT'S THIS?

Subscribe✉ Add Disqus to your sited Privacy

Recommend

Share ›

Share ›

Spencer Wells

Spencer's posts

Martin Levine

Martin's posts

Amy Butcher

Amy's posts

Larry Kaplan

Larry's posts

Michael Wyland

Michael's posts

Patricia Schaefer

Patricia's posts

jeanne allen

Jeanne's posts

Debbie Laskey

Debbie's posts

John Godfrey

John's posts

Kari Thierer

Kari's posts

Meredith Betz

Meredith's posts

Erin Lamb

Erin's posts

POPULAR POSTS

Subscription includes a weekly note from NPQ's

Editor-in-Chief

Write for NPQ

NEWSWIRE WRITERS

ABOUT

ADVERTISE

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

FOUNDATIONS ANDFUNDERS

EDITORIAL ADVISORYBOARD

NPQ STAFF

CONTACT US

DONORS

NEWSLETTERS

COPYRIGHT POLICY

PRIVACY POLICY

© Copyright 2015, Nonprofit Quarterly

Copyright Policy Privacy Policy

Built with the Largo WordPress Theme from the Institute for Nonprofit News.

SUBSCRIBE

GIVE A GIFT

RENEW/CHANGE SUBSCRIPTION

NEWS PHILANTHROPY MANAGEMENT GOVERNANCEFUNDRAISING POLICY OPINION RESOURCES

Nonprofits should be

Cautious with “FunRun” Vendors: AnotherNational Scam Exposed

1

Stories of those

Homeless Who Don’t Fitthe “Housing First”Model

2

Looking Back at the

War on Poverty: A

Conversation with

Sheldon Danziger

3

Nativism Surges while

President’s ExecutiveAction on Immigration

Stalls

4

IRS Commissioner

Koskinen on 501(c)(4)

Regulations: No

Timeline

5

�We scour the web for the latest

news that applies to the nonprofit

sector.

Get NPQ's free newsletter today!

Sign up for NPQ's daily newsletter here:

Email

Submit

� � � � �

Donate Now GO� � � � � Search Donate Now �� � � � �

NEWS PHILANTHROPY MANAGEMENT GOVERNANCEFUNDRAISING POLICY OPINION MORE

SHARE � � � FOLLOW �Immigration � The Editors

Generated with www.html-to-pdf.net Page 3 / 4

Page 4: Immigration

immigration rally in dc

For Congress: Next Up,ImmigrationBy THE EDITORS | March 22, 2010

Photo by:

DCTWINKIE5500

On the same

day the House

passed the

landmark

health care

bill—

extending

health care

coverage to

more than 30

million

Americans—

tens of thousands of demonstrators rallied on the National Mall Sunday

to re-energize Congress to take up the next volatile issue on the

President’s agenda—immigration reform.

President Barack Obama, who promised to make overhauling the

immigration system a top priority in his first year, sought to reassure

those at the rally with a video message promising to fix a “broken

immigration system.” Even though the President couldn’t actually

change the provisions of the health insurance reform bill that preclude

undocumented immigrants from participating and require a waiting

period for legal immigrants, it was enough to convince Representative

Luis Gutierrez, the Chicago Democrat outspoken in favor of

immigration reform, to vote in favor of health care legislation on March

21st after he had pledged to oppose it because of its immigration

language.

Is the President’s pledge to move on immigration reform enough to

move Congress to act? Will Gutierrez’s hopes—and those of the

demonstrators at the rallies—be fulfilled or dashed in this, the second

year of the Obama Administration? Every nonprofit has a stake in how

our nation deals with immigrants. We at Nonprofit Quarterly dedicated

our Summer 2009 issue to immigration—including articles that take

apart and re-stitch the picture of nonprofits and their service, program,

and advocacy relationships with immigrant populations. We hope you’ll

take a look as you keep an eye on the coming national conversation.

READ NEXT

Nonprofit Newswire | Immigrants Can Cheer and Jeer

for Health Care ReformBy RICK COHEN March 26, 2010

This commentary from a health policy attorney at the national Immigration Law Center in

Los Angeles will hopefully correct some of the misconceptions contained in articles that we

at NPQ may have cited as sources on the treatment and standing of immigrants in the new

health insurance reform legislation passed by the House.

Community Protests as Fannie MaeBacks Affordable Housing Sell-off in …1 comment • 8 days ago

Vince O'Donnell — Spencer Wells shines

a much-needed light on the disconnect

between community-based efforts to …

Single-Family Home Rental: A Sign ofthe Economic Times

1 comment • 15 days ago

heyjp — One very important issue and big

concern about SFR investors is that rent

revenue leaves the community. Local …

Some Reasons behind SocietalNeglect of Rural Poverty—and Rural …1 comment • 4 days ago

John Abell — This article raises a number

of useful points. However, one of them--

the assertion that there is a "higher rate …

Do 9 out of 10 Nonprofits Fail as BenCarson Asserts? No, Says …2 comments • 8 days ago

iMission Institute — Fail at what? Every

nonprofit is hard at work building and

harnessing the social capital and …

ALSO ON NONPROFIT QUARTERLY

2 Comments Nonprofit Quarterly Lo…1

Share Sort by Best

Join the discussion…

• Reply •

rick cohen • 6 years ago

Dear Jason: This was actually one of the issues that motivated us to do the special

edition of NPQ on immmigration. We came across Senator Max Baucus's adamant

statements about excluding "illegal" immigrants struck us as over-the-top and

pandering to the anti-immigrant populace. As the Guardian (from the UK!) said

yesterday, the exclusion of undocumented immigrants was the "price" that Congress

and the White House were willing to pay to keep the "yes" votes of Democrats in

states such as Texas, which routinely denies much aid to undocumented immigrants

and legal immigrants alike (http://www.guardian.co.uk/worl.... The final bill I

believe prevents undocumented immigrants from purchasing health insurance on

the insurance exchanges even if they use their own money. Then we came across

the provisions in earlier versions of the bill that mandated a waiting period even for

legal immigrants. I believe that the final bill still has a waiting period to be eligible

for Medicaid for legal immigrants, I don't know about its treatment of legal

immigrants regarding other kinds of subsidized or mandated health insurance.

That's why I had some respect for Gutierrez's position on the heinous, anti-

immigrant provisions of the health care legislation. I am truly disappointed in our

nation's leadership in its willingness to ignore the needs and rights of immigrants

when it comes to health insurance. It's odd that this was a prime motivation behind

the NPQ immigration edition--and now the federal government's provisions on

immigrants and health care are close to being enshrined into law.

• Reply •

Jason Feldman • 6 years ago

Ironically enough, the badly needed Immigration reform is probably tied into the

passage of a health care bill. A central issue of the health care and immigration bill is

where do illegal immigrants fit in? People here illegally will continue to work

regardless. It just makes sense for them to obtain some sort of status and pay taxes,

social security, medicaid, etc. Moreover, our economy needs both educated and

uneducated foreign workers to survive. Both contribute to the economy. The

educated workers fill gaps in the sectors where we have dramatic shortages of

qualified workers like the IT and health care field. Hard working uneducated

workers still promote the economy as their taxes and earnings (even if some gets

sent home) ultimately is reinvested in the U.S economy. Any economist will tell you

the free flow of labor is essential to maximize production and output. And after all

we are all immigrants at one time or another.

-Jason Feldman, Attorney at Law

http://www.immigrateme.com

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