Los Angeles Times

Budget could boost help for immigrants

Brown’s proposal earmarks an extra $15 million to expand legal aid for those fighting deportatio­n.

- By Jazmine Ulloa jazmine.ulloa@latimes.com

Gov. Jerry Brown has earmarked an extra $15 million in the state budget to expand legal defense services for people battling deportatio­n, a move that could be interprete­d as a response to the Trump administra­tion’s broadened immigratio­n enforcemen­t orders.

The one-time cash infusion would boost the state’s financial help to those in the country illegally to $33 million. Immigrant rights groups and lawyers hailed the increased funding in Brown’s revised state budget, calling it a signal that the state is committed to protecting families from what they fear could happen under President Trump.

But although the total funds are enough to support existing services, policy analysts said lawmakers might need almost double this amount to fund the other new legal initiative­s under considerat­ion at the state Capitol.

“We urge the Legislatur­e to deepen its investment in programs,” said Ronald Coleman, government affairs director for the California Immigrant Policy Center. “It is going to be key given that California can be ground zero for the devastatio­n that we would face from Donald Trump’s deportatio­n policies.”

Improving legal defense for immigrants has been a significan­t part of a legislativ­e package proposed by Democrats, in an attempt to assist more than 2 million people living in the state illegally. Among the proposals is a $14-million request to provide legal training, written materials, mentoring and technical assistance to county public defenders on the immigratio­n consequenc­es of criminal conviction­s.

Another bill seeks to create a $12-million legal defense program for immigrants facing deportatio­n who do not have a violent felony on their records; a third would increase legal counsel for deported veterans, depending on available funding in the annual budget.

Opponents of the programs have argued against using taxpayer money to help offenders in the face of potential funding cuts from the federal government. And debate in Sacramento has simmered over who should be served with the limited resources.

On the state Senate floor last month, Sen. Ben Hueso (D-San Diego) said he had to reduce the scope of Senate Bill 6, which would fund the $12-million legal initiative, to prioritize immigrants with children, immigrants with parents who are citizens, veterans and asylum seekers.

Proponents say the legislativ­e proposals come as lawyers and advocates across the country have sought to increase government-funded access to counsel for immigrants. The movement has centered on showing that many immigrants would be granted relief if they had the resources to prove their cases and that for some, the repercussi­ons of deportatio­n could lead to death.

California’s first attempt at a statewide legal defense program came in 2014, when $3 million was spent on providing legal aid to an unpreceden­ted number of children arriving alone at the U.S.Mexico border from Central America.

Two years later, the state authorized nearly $30 million for the developmen­t of One California, a federal assistance program to help thousands of immigrants apply for naturaliza­tion and former President Obama’s deferred action programs, known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals and Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents.

As of fiscal year 2015, the state Department of Social Services, which administer­ed both legal defense initiative­s, had contracted with nonprofits to serve more than 1,300 children, with an average cost per case totaling $5,000. Its second program had awarded a little over $14 million to 61 organizati­ons and was in the midst of finalizing contracts for the 2016 fiscal year, for over $29 million to about 80 immigratio­n and legal aid groups.

Last week’s revised budget preserves the $3 million allotment for the unaccompan­ied-minors program and an ongoing $15 million allocation for One California. Its one-time $15-million effort would further expand legal services for people seeking naturaliza­tion services, deportatio­n defense or assistance in receiving other legal immigratio­n status.

Brown’s office declined to comment on funds, and any changes on the use of the dollars must be hashed out with the Legislatur­e.

Laura Polstein, an immigratio­n senior staff attorney at Centro Legal de la Raza, called the new money a “game changer” for immigratio­n lawyers struggling to provide adequate representa­tion on the ground.

Maya Ingram, a legislativ­e advocate with the American Civil Liberties Union of California, said her organizati­on was heartened to see California “take long overdue steps to even the playing field.”

“The federal government has tipped the scales of justice against immigrants fighting to remain in their communitie­s, working and contributi­ng to our state by forcing them to navigate the legal maze of deportatio­n proceeding­s alone,” she said.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? GOV. JERRY BROWN is proposing a one-time cash infusion to boost help for those in the country illegally to $33 million. Rights advocates and lawyers say it is a signal of the state’s commitment to protecting migrants.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press GOV. JERRY BROWN is proposing a one-time cash infusion to boost help for those in the country illegally to $33 million. Rights advocates and lawyers say it is a signal of the state’s commitment to protecting migrants.

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