Reflections From the L4GG Travel Fund: Crystal

From mid-2018 during the Family Separation Crisis to early 2020 when the COVID-19 pandemic hit, The Lawyers For Good Government Travel Program enabled more than 230 attorneys and other advocates from across the country to travel to the southern border region and support people seeking safety through asylum.

The following is a reflection from Crystal, a Spanish-speaking law student, who was able to travel to TIjuana, Mexico to work with Al Otro Lado through the travel program. 

L4GG Travel Fund Grant Recipient, Crystal.

​​I had an amazing experience working with Al Otro Lado. With dozens of families coming into the clinic every weekday, there are so many voids one can fill to assist. One aspect I particularly enjoyed was the organization’s commitment to providing a safe space for the children while their guardians participated in the clinical services. Al Otro Lado is a unique and special place because it offers a comprehensive range of services to families who need a welcoming space. Some days I interacted with dozens of children, from infants to teenagers.

I enjoyed playing a small part in ensuring that the children were enjoying themselves, which allowed their families to feel at ease knowing they were being cared for. I had no idea what to expect when I arrived in Mexico, but when I imagined volunteering with any legal clinic, I never thought I could feel as though I was surrounded by family.

One issue that took me by surprise was just how prominent an issue race plays at the border. I was on the ground when the Trump administration announced its restrictive policy that would render asylum seekers crossing the border into Mexico ineligible to legally cross the border through the asylum process in the U.S.

The result of such a policy would massively cut racial minorities’ access to the United States. I saw the real-world impact this had on people who have already gone through traumatic circumstances to arrive in Mexico.

To shed some light on the process, asylum seekers receive a number at the entry point that allows them to cross over and eventually enter the detention centers in the U.S. At the current rate, anyone who receives a number will likely wait several months for that number to be called, with no explanation as to why the processing is moving at a sloth’s pace and great concern over how the Trump administration might restrict most asylum seekers’ access entirely. Many days I was there, no number was called at all, but those whose numbers are next on the list must persistently arrive at the entry point every day and wait in hope that that day will be their lucky break.

When I arrived in Tijuana, the African asylum-seekers had recently staged a protest, arguing that they were not receiving fair treatment in the number-calling process. After the protests, the Black protesters were granted African representatives to participate in the number-calling process in an attempt to reduce the visible discrimination that was preventing black asylum seekers from having their number called. Even so, black asylum seekers appeared especially discouraged and agitated as they waited, with little hopes that their number would soon be called. Racial issues in the immigration process are extremely prevalent, and it’s important that Americans understand the painful journeys people are undergoing. People need to learn about the life-threatening process many asylum seekers endure to arrive in Tijuana, passing through the Panama jungle. People need to hear eyewitness accounts of the numbing atrocities happening in Cameroon that have led to so many fleeing the country, or the gang violence in Mexico and Central America that has left so many children parentless.
I highly recommend that any law student volunteer with a front line organization if they get the chance, even if it’s just for a Spring Break or a week before school starts back up. Law students are future legislators, judges, and advocates, so it’s critical to recruit and engage the attorneys of tomorrow on immigration issues to ensure progress is both gained and maintained over time. Immigration work is an experience that breeds breadth and depth to any person, and I encourage anyone to try it at least once. You’ll likely want to continue in some capacity.


Celebrating Human Rights Day with L4GG

Celebrating Human Rights Day with L4GG

For today’s Human Rights Day celebration, I encourage the legal community to reflect on what it means to have inalienable rights and equal dignity and worth of every person.

We all have inalienable rights, regardless of race, color, language, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability status. Where the law does not recognize those rights, they can and must be changed.

L4GG Celebrates Five Years With Event Series

In November of 2016, Traci Feit Love made a post on Facebook, as a lawyer, a parent, and a person uncertain about the future, and wanting to make change. When she made that post, she had no idea what that spark would ignite, and how many lawyers would respond. 

Now, five years later, Lawyers for Good Government (L4GG) has grown into an organization with thousands of supporters like you, all across the country, who are working towards real change. We are lawyers, law students, and activists who believe in using our skills and expertise to build a better world, from the halls of legislation to making an impact on-the-ground.

L4GG would like to invite you to join us for a series of events to celebrate L4GG’s impact over the last five years, and share with you our vision for the future of L4GG. 

Check out the schedule of events here and click Follow Calender to register. You can attend as many events as you’d like — whatever works for your schedule. 

Can’t make an event? Register and we’ll send you the recording, that way you don’t miss out. 

From the bottom of my heart, L4GG thanks you for your continued support throughout the years. We hope you’ll join us to celebrate the future, and for whatever the next 5 years will bring. 

New Report: Voters of Color Suffer Without Paid Leave

Today, Lawyers for Good Government (L4GG) released its new report indicating that there are still many legal barriers that prevent people from exercising their civic duty, and that those barriers primarily affect Black and Brown voters.  

The report, titled “No Time To Vote: Achieving Racial Equity in Paid Time Off on Election Day”, says that during the 2016, 2018, and 2020 elections, Black and Brown voters waited longer to vote than white voters. In 2016, voters in predominantly Black communities waited 29% longer than voters in predominantly white communities

To combat the discriminatory impacts on voters of color, the report offers the recommendation that states require that employees have time to vote without penalty or loss of wages. The report found that while thirty states require employers to allow their employees time off to vote on Election Day, the vast majority of the states that require leave for voting cap the time requirement at one, two, or three hours. These caps are problematic because voters must often stand in line for far longer, forcing them to choose between their income and exercising their right to vote. Additionally, six states require employers to allow leave, but require that the leave is unpaid.

Making voting accessible and equitable is a racial justice issue. Significant numbers of people continue to vote in person on Election Day, and while our nation has progressed beyond the overt racism of poll taxes and literacy tests, a persistent barrier has been long lines to vote and the so-called ‘time tax,’ which continues to disenfranchise people of color. Our report hopes to shed light on this disparity and suggest viable solutions to make voting fairer for all Americans.
— Adam Fernandez, L4GG’s Vice President of Policy and Strategic Engagement
In order to uphold the tenets of our democracy, it needs to work for everyone. To do that, we recommend policy changes that guarantee that all workers will have the necessary amount of time to leave work to vote without penalty or loss of pay. Our suggestions also provide an explicit private right of action to hold employers accountable if they violate the policy. In this way, we hope to see a new day for racial equity in voting, and the strengthening of our democracy.
— Joe Spielberger, L4GG's Legislative Counsel on Policy and Strategic Engagement

L4GG Releases New Policy Report on Child Farmworkers in Dangerous Conditions

L4GG Releases New Policy Report on Child Farmworkers in Dangerous Conditions

L4GG is proud to release our first-ever report from our Lawyers for Racial Justice initiative. Our report, “Child Farmworkers: Too Young, Vulnerable, & Unprotected,” highlights the lack of regulatory protections for child farmworkers and its racially discriminatory impact on children of color.

L4GG and Human Rights Organizations Petition IACHR to Direct US to End Title 42

Lawyers For Good Government (L4GG), alongside several other human rights organizations, have filed a petition to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) regarding Title 42.

The petition asks the IACHR order the United States to take urgent steps to protect asylum seekers from the risk of irreparable harm caused by the Title 42 policy, and to implement measures to protect other asylum seekers who are or would be subject to Title 42 expulsions.

You can read the petition here.

L4GG Joins 28 Organizations in Amici Brief Showing Harms from Title 42

L4GG Joins 28 Organizations in Amici Brief Showing Harms from Title 42

On Friday, September 24, Lawyers for Good Government (L4GG) and its immigrants’ rights initiative Project Corazon joined a diverse coalition of 28 other organizations to file an amici curiae (“friends of the court”) brief illustrating the particular harm and suffering that Title 42 - a racist Trump-era policy that uses the pretense of the pandemic to expel migrants—inflicts on children and their families.

"End the War on Black Immigrants!" — L4GG joins the UndocuBlack Network in call to Biden, Pelosi

After the horrific events in Del Rio, Texas, in which hundreds of Haitians seeking safety were rounded up by border agents on horseback using lariats, the UndocuBlack Network issued a letter to President Biden, Vice President Harris, Speaker of the House Pelosi and Majority Leader Schumer to end the war on Black immigrants.

The letter calls for the end of Title 42, as well as support for Haitian immigrants, and investment in a humane and holistic immigration system.

To read the letter, click here.