Chattanooga Times Free Press

In Tennessee, need for immigratio­n legal help far outweighs the demand

- BY JAMIE MCGEE TENNESSEE LOOKOUT Read more at TennesseeL­ookout.com.

On Super Bowl Sunday in 2017, Fuad Suleman, his wife and three children were greeted in the Nashville Internatio­nal Airport by a crowd of hundreds who welcomed them to their new city after an exhausting journey from Iraq. The family had been caught in what was known as the Trump administra­tion’s “Muslim ban” and had been denied entrance weeks earlier.

“They were chanting, ‘Welcome home,’” Suleman said. “I never forget that moment.”

Suleman had worked as a translator for an organizati­on helping the U.S. government in Iraq, and his family had been approved for special immigrant visas. They had sold their home, their car and were no longer safe in their home country.

“I put my life, my family’s life in danger, in jeopardy because of my link helping the U.S. government,” he said.

In mid-December, Suleman and his family became U.S. citizens, a status that they obtained with the free help of Tennessee Immigratio­n & Refugee Rights Coalition’s legal team in Nashville. During two visits and through emails, Coalition legal representa­tives guided him through the applicatio­n and interview process and helped him avoid pitfalls that had delayed or disrupted the process for others he knew.

“I wanted a perfect applicatio­n, not any place for errors or any mistakes,” Suleman said.

As citizens, Suleman and his wife registered to vote, are eligible for public benefits and no longer have to worry about being turned away from the U.S. again.

“It was a long journey, a lot of ups and downs, a lot of anxiety, a lot of fear,” he said. “Now, we feel confident we are really in our home.”

Across Tennessee, in both rural and urban areas, demand for immigratio­n legal services far exceeds supply, and the need has grown more acute as immigrant communitie­s have expanded. The issue affects the ability for newcomers to avoid deportatio­n, obtain driver’s licenses and work permits, access benefits they are eligible for and engage more fully in their communitie­s.

“We can get a dozen calls a day from various families needing legal representa­tion, and we can only take a fraction of those,” said Ashley Cuber, an attorney with Latino Memphis. “Other nonprofits such as ours that do low cost, or pro bono legal services, they are absolutely slammed and absolutely don’t have the resources to take all the cases.”

In Tennessee, there were 2,200 undocument­ed immigrants for every immigratio­n legal profession­al at charitable organizati­ons, well above the national average of 1,400, according to a recent report from The Center for Migration Studies in New York. There are fewer than 45 Tennessee immigratio­n attorneys listed by the American Immigratio­n Lawyers Associatio­n, and close to half offer help with deportatio­n and asylum cases.

“Over a decade now, Tennessee has had a really fast-growing immigrant population,” said Lisa Sherman Luna, executive director of the Tennessee Immigratio­n & Refugee Rights Coalition in Nashville. “There hasn’t been enough infrastruc­ture that has been built to support that rapid growth.”

Immigrant advocates argue that while the individual­s in need of legal support or defense have the most at stake, the ramificati­ons of inadequate resources ripple across communitie­s, affecting family stability, classrooms, income levels and road and neighborho­od safety.

“These are really highimpact cases,” Donald Kerwin, executive director of the Center for Migration Studies, said. “As people are able to stabilize in a particular place and integrate and advance in status, they are able to earn more, contribute more, buy homes and basically become more establishe­d in the community to the benefit of everyone. It’s an extremely important service.”

NAVIGATING THE SYSTEM

Given the complexiti­es of the U.S. immigratio­n system, legal representa­tion can be vital to filing a status claim or defending against removal. A 2015 study from the University of Pennsylvan­ia Law Review found that detained immigrants with legal representa­tion were more than 10 times more likely to have their cases terminated or obtain relief than those without legal help.

“The vast majority who are in removal and can afford an attorney or have an attorney to fight for them are actually eligible to be here under immigratio­n relief,” Luna said. “It’s almost nonexisten­t that people can afford an attorney.”

Immigratio­n cases are civil, not criminal, which means that no public counsel is appointed. Of pending cases heard at the Memphis Immigratio­n Court, nearly 70% are unrepresen­ted, according to the New Yorkbased Vera Institute of Justice, citing Syracuse University’s Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use.

For those seeking asylum, applicatio­ns, accompanyi­ng evidence and affidavits can end up inches high, even when an applicant comes from a country where violence is well-establishe­d, said Bethany Jackson, legal director of Tennessee Justice For our Neighbors. Applicants must accurately disclose immigratio­n histories, contact with law enforcemen­t and health issues, and they must explain why they are at risk in their home country.

“It’s not just filling out a form with your name and address and where you came from,” Jackson said. “You have the burden of proof. You have to prove your eligibilit­y for each requiremen­t for asylum.”

In the past year, Nashville has become home to more than 500 Afghan refugees and to several Ukrainians, each of whom need legal assistance in their pursuit of asylum status. While those humanitari­an crises have gained significan­t media coverage, local asylum seekers from several other countries — Haiti, Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala, Colombia, Venezuela, etc. — are also in need of legal help.

“We serve people from all over the world,” Jackson said. “They are all coming to the U.S. for the same reason. They just want a better future for their families, and they are fleeing the same things the Afghans are. They want to be physically safe.”

While an attorney can boost success rates, the cost of hiring one is often insurmount­able. There is a limited pool of those who can offer pro bono work, but the cost often exceeds what clients can afford.

“You could be looking at spending $10,000 on an asylum case, easily,” said Tessa Lemos Del Pino, executive director of Tennessee Justice For our Neighbors. “If you are somebody who came here with nothing, there is no way you could pay that.”

Often, asylum seekers will see the expense or challenge of accessing a private attorney and will turn instead to less expensive and less qualified profession­als. They could end up paying for bad advice that can further complicate their path to legal status if they file incorrect informatio­n, Jackson said.

In Tennessee, there are more than 71,000 lawful permanent residents eligible to naturalize, according to the U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n services, but they may lack the resources or the know-how to proceed, Luna said. There are 2,900 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals recipients in Middle Tennessee who must seek renewal every two years. Many crime victims, traffickin­g victims and other immigrant groups are eligible for protected status but need lawyers to effectivel­y navigate the system.

For Suleman and his wife, citizenshi­p has meant a new confidence and sense of security in their lives. He is now a case manager for Nashville Internatio­nal Center for Empowermen­t and helps other immigrants resettle. He often greets new arrivals at the Nashville airport as they begin their next chapter in a new, unfamiliar city and connects them to resources that can help them get started.

“I remember myself every time,” he said of his airport duties. “I put myself in their place. It’s a great feeling when I help them, when I see smiles from their faces, on their kids’ faces. It gives me a huge love. I can’t find suitable words.”

UNIVERSAL REPRESENTA­TION GROWING NATIONWIDE

Across the nation, cities, counties and some states have launched representa­tion programs to provide free deportatio­n defense for immigrants, and some initiative­s have covered expenses for those in need of affirmativ­e relief, as well. The effort began with a pilot program in New York City in 2013, and programs are now underway in more than 55 jurisdicti­ons, including Denver, Dallas and Atlanta and nine states, according to Vera Institute. Some initiative­s have begun with six-digit budgets, while others provide millions of dollars. In 2022, Oregon approved a $15 million initiative.

“In the last 10 years, there has really been incredible growth in the movement at the local and state level for public funding for deportatio­n defense,” said Annie Chen, Vera Institute’s director of advancing universal representa­tion. “You are seeing this all around the country.”

There has been pushback in some areas from lawmakers who object to public dollars going toward legal costs for immigrants, but advocates argue these initiative­s go to ensure that eligibilit­y laws are actually being followed.

This is about giving people the ability to access rights that they are entitled to under current immigratio­n law, Chen said.

The Tennessee Immigratio­n & Refugee Rights Coalition and Tennessee Justice For Our Neighbors were awarded a $1.8 million grant in June from the federal American Rescue Plan through Metro Nashville. They have trained local law school students and have hosted free legal services clinics serving Davidson County residents, assisting close to 200 Nashville residents in the grant’s first five months. Through the funding support, both organizati­ons have added attorneys and paralegals to their legal teams and are helping multiple staff members pursue U.S. Department of Justice certificat­ion that will allow them to provide legal counsel.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JOHN PARTIPILO / TENNESSEE LOOKOUT ?? Fuad Suleman and his family have afternoon coffee in their Nashville home.
PHOTOS BY JOHN PARTIPILO / TENNESSEE LOOKOUT Fuad Suleman and his family have afternoon coffee in their Nashville home.
 ?? ?? Fuad Suleman emigrated from Iraq with his family in 2017. Now a U.S. citizen, he assists other immigrants with the resettleme­nt process.
Fuad Suleman emigrated from Iraq with his family in 2017. Now a U.S. citizen, he assists other immigrants with the resettleme­nt process.

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