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Texas Nonprofit That Raised Millions Launches Hotline to Reunite Families

Ruth McCambridge
June 29, 2018
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“Stop Separating Immigrant Families Press Conference and Rally Chicago Illinois 6-5-18,” Charles Edward Miller

June 28, 2018; Washington Post

A week ago, NPQ covered the story of a Texas-based nonprofit, the Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services (RAICES), which has now received $20 million in donations from a public reacting to the Trump administration’s policy separating children from their parents when families enter the country seeking asylum. It was not at that time exactly clear how all of that money would be spent, but the organization has now announced it has established a database of separated children and a hotline to help reunite families separated under the Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” policy. Even now, after Trump has rescinded his policy, as many as 2,500 children remain in detention.

The volunteer-staffed National Families Together Hotline will work to find the parents of detained children, almost as a private investigator would, and then staff will help connect parents to free legal services.

“Reuniting the families separated by the current administration’s ‘zero tolerance policy’ has become essentially a game of hide and seek,” said Jonathan Ryan, executive director of RAICES.

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In New York, the Vera Institute of Justice is also assisting with reunification from the other side, through helping detained parents find their children.

On June 26th, US District Judge Dana Sabraw issued an injunction requiring that the federal government reunify migrant families with their children within 30 days for children ages five and up and within 14 days in the cases of children younger than that. The judge charged the federal government with “reactive governance” within “a chaotic circumstance of the government’s own making.” Still, the Department of Homeland Security, which detains parents, and the Department of Health and Human Services, which attends to separated children, have not communicated how they will comply with the injunction.

According to the Washington Post, RAICES has documented 453 children who still do not know where their parents are. “The youngest is just two months old, and the average age is eight.” Meanwhile, some toddlers, report attorneys, are being ordered into court to advocate for themselves, and it is possible that some of the parents have already been deported.—Ruth McCambridge

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About the author
Ruth McCambridge

Ruth is Editor Emerita of the Nonprofit Quarterly. Her background includes forty-five years of experience in nonprofits, primarily in organizations that mix grassroots community work with policy change. Beginning in the mid-1980s, Ruth spent a decade at the Boston Foundation, developing and implementing capacity building programs and advocating for grantmaking attention to constituent involvement.

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