Los Angeles Times

Groups form emergency relief fund to aid recent immigrants

- By Kate Linthicum kate.linthicum@latimes.com

Several philanthro­pic groups have formed an emergency relief fund to assist Los Angeles nonprofits overwhelme­d by an influx of immigrant children and their parents.

On Thursday, a coalition of groups announced a pledge drive to raise money for the fund. Antonia Hernandez, president and chief executive of the California Community Foundation, said it is essential that the community come together to support the large numbers of immigrant youths who have crossed the border illegally in the last year.

“They are our children,” she said.

The first recipients of the grant money will be the Esperanza Immigrant Rights Project, which provides pro bono legal services to immigrants, and the Central American Resource Center, which connects immigrants with case workers, Hernandez said.

Money from the fund will also be used to pay for a fulltime employee to coordinate the relief effort. Hernandez said the group has hired Steve Reyes, an aide to L.A. County Supervisor Gloria Molina. Reyes has taken a six-month leave of absence from Molina’s office to take on the job.

Like federal immigratio­n officials and courts, the nonprofit world has been overwhelme­d by the arrival of more than 57,000 unaccompan­ied youths at the nation’s southern border this fiscal year, as well as other minors who crossed with their parents. Most come from countries in Central America and say they are f leeing escalating gang violence.

In recent months, Los Angeles nonprofits have begun to feel the effects of the surge, with groups that provide free legal services to immigrants saying that they do not have enough lawyers to meet demand.

Between Jan. 1 and July 7, 3,150 immigrant children who crossed the border alone were released to guardians in California, according to the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt.

Hernandez said her coalition has already raised nearly half a million dollars from groups including the Weingart Foundation and the California Wellness Foundation. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti supports the effort.

In a news release announcing the formation of the fund, Garcetti said the arrival of immigrant youths “is a humanitari­an issue, and the health and safety of these children is of utmost importance.”

 ?? Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times ?? A HONDURAN CHILD leaving his home country talks with an official near Ocotepeque, Honduras, near the border with Guatemala. Many Central Americans, especially youths, are f leeing escalating gang violence.
Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times A HONDURAN CHILD leaving his home country talks with an official near Ocotepeque, Honduras, near the border with Guatemala. Many Central Americans, especially youths, are f leeing escalating gang violence.

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