
Ayanna Pressley shares ideas with 7th Congressional District residents.
Holds listening session at East Boston YMCA
Ayanna Pressley, Congresswoman-elect for the Massachusetts 7th Congressional District, held an equity agenda forum in East Boston Dec. 15 with a focus on immigration.
“I’m accountable to you,” said Pressley to the several dozen attendees on Saturday afternoon.
“You don’t have to ask and wonder, what are you doing in Washington? This is the blueprint.”
Pressley said she would be using feedback, experiences and ideas from the community to inform her policy agenda and legislative work.
“I said that if I was so humbled and fortunate enough to be elected to represent the Massachusetts 7th in Congress, that if you delivered me, that I was bringing all of you along with me,” she said. “This is how I’m doing that. By developing legislation in concert with you. By actively listening to you.”
The forum, held at the East Boston YMCA in the Orient Heights neighborhood, was hosted in partnership with the Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition. Free child care and Spanish translation was provided.
District 2 City Councilor Lydia Edwards was in attendance, as well as representatives from the offices of Mayor Martin Walsh and state Rep. Adrian Madaro.
Key immigration issues
Liza Ryan, director of organizing for MIRA, outlined key immigration policies and civil rights that have been under attack in the last year by federal, state and local governments.
“You know your community best. We need your expertise at this moment,” said Ryan.
The major battles currently being
fought by immigrants and their allies on the federal level include the
renewal of the Temporary Protected Status program; maintaining the
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals programs; defeating President
Trump’s socalled “Muslim ban;” fighting the possibility of a citizenship
question on the 2020 U.S. Census; and protecting immigrants and
refugees seeking asylum at the U.S. border.
On
the local level, Ryan said that the Safe Communities Act, a state bill
that would prevent deputizing state and local law enforcement as ICE
agents, was only adopted as a budget amendment by the Massachusetts
Senate thus far.
Other
state immigration issues include the recent REAL ID law that prevents
undocumented immigrants from obtaining a Massachusetts driver’s license
and the barring of undocumented students from receiving financial aid
for college.
Community ideas
While
each individual attendee was able to write down policy ideas and
concerns and submit them directly to Pressley’s team, several ideas were
expressed aloud by community members.
These
ideas included lobbying to update the state’s foundation budget bill
with increased education funding and adding more trauma counselors in
schools; streamlining citizenship pathways through programs such as TPS;
including black and Asian immigrants in the conversation of immigrant
civil rights; dispelling the “model immigrant” narrative; and addressing
voter suppression tactics in certain communities.
Ryan
said that a lot of the work being done by agencies such as the Lawyers
for Civil Rights, American Civil Liberties Union and Centro Presente has
been through lawsuits directed at the Trump Administration. TPS holders
gained a temporary reprieve through a preliminary injunction granted by
U.S. District Judge Edward Chen in October after a case was filed last
March by the ACLU of Southern California and other advocates.
Although
Pressley does not have direct legislative influence at the State House
level, she said, “I will be leaning in on some state issues as well,”
through her advocacy work.
One
attendee, Yvette Modestin, highlighted her perspective as a black woman
born and raised in Panama and living in the U.S. “I often don’t get
included in conversations about immigration policy and Latinx issues,”
she said. “All immigrants don’t look the same, and it’s important we
include that in this agenda.”
Pressley
told the group, “This agenda is called the equity agenda because the
Massachusetts 7th is the most diverse and unequal congressional district
in our delegation and arguably one of the most unequal in the country.
Those disparities didn’t just happen. They were created by policy.”
She
continued, “The way to disrupt these inequitable outcomes along
transit, environmental injustices, access to affordable housing, jobs
with a living wage, high performing schools and communities that feel
safe and healthy ... is through holistic and thoughtful policy that puts
you at the center.”
During
her congressional campaign in November, Pressley hosted an equity
agenda forum on criminal justice reform in Roxbury. The
Congresswoman-elect said she will continue to host more forums in the
7th Congressional District in the near future.