Las Vegas Review-Journal

Immigrant legal services to get boost

National nonprofit to invest millions to help

- By Jessie Bekker Las Vegas Review-journal

A national nonprofit dedicated to clean energy, health care and immigratio­n advocacy will invest millions of dollars over the next several years to make legal resources available to immigrants.

Tom Steyer, president of Nextgen America, announced the donation Wednesday at a Las Vegas news conference. The amount of the donation is not yet determined but is expected to be in the seven-figure range. The money will go toward recruiting accredited lawyers to represent immigrants dealing with U.S. immigratio­n authoritie­s and creating an online tool for community advocates to interact with one other.

As part of the initiative, set to launch in the next few months, Nextgen plans to partner with organizati­ons nationwide to share training materials. In Las Vegas, the group will work with Catholic Charities of Southern Nevada, the Progressiv­e Leadership Alliance of Nevada and the American Immigratio­n Lawyers Associatio­n Nevada chapter.

“When we think about where is this a really key question, it’s here,” Steyer said of the Las Vegas region. About 22 percent of Clark County residents were born outside of the United States, census data show.

Steyer announced the initiative at a panel with local immigratio­n advocates at the Culinary union headquarte­rs on Commerce Street.

The initiative’s supporters include state Sen. Yvanna Cancela, D-las Vegas, and UNLV Professor Michael Kagan. Cancela, who directs a program called the Citizenshi­p Project, which helps immigrant families naturalize, said the office has had difficulty answering the flood of nuanced questions that has poured in since Donald Trump became president.

“We are overwhelme­d,” agreed Kagan, who directs the school’s immigratio­n clinic. The school’s immigratio­n counsel is one of the few that handles deportatio­n defense in the valley, he said.

“I think the hardest job in our office is often our receptioni­st, who deals with people coming and pleading for assistance, because we usually have nowhere to refer them to,” Kagan said. “There just isn’t any place where people can usually go to get a lawyer to defend them when the government is trying to deport them.”

Undocument­ed immigrants and residents with documentat­ion like visas and green cards will be able to access services through organizati­ons participat­ing in the initiative.

“Only one in three people who need representa­tion get it,” Steyer said. “And therefore, the legal services for immigrants, who are working as hard as they possibly can, needs to have the tools and the resources to expand and do their job more broadly for more people.”

Contact Jessie Bekker at jbekker@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-4563. Follow @jessiebekk­s on Twitter.

 ?? Erik Verduzco ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco Union member Nelson Lucero at a news conference Wednesday on immigratio­n at the Culinary Local 226.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco Union member Nelson Lucero at a news conference Wednesday on immigratio­n at the Culinary Local 226.

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