Undocumented Bronxite Lived On $100 Per Week

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New York City NY

28 May, 2021

5:30 PM

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By Deanna Garcia, DocumentedNY May 28, 2021 Before the pandemic, Isabel Galán worked at a dry cleaner and earned $350 a week, which she used to support her children and her mother in Mexico. Yet last March, as Galán's job closed its doors. She has mainly earned money since then by doing odd jobs, earning just about $100 each week. According to the Fiscal Policy Institute, undocumented immigrant women like Galán were affected the most during the pandemic. Many of them had low-wage jobs in the service sector that closed during the pandemic, while some had to stay home with their children to help with virtual learning. About 35,000 undocumented women in New York City didn't have enough food this past March. The New York Times In other local immigration news… City Council Candidates Share Immigration Plans The race for the New York City Council's 18th District seat, which covers a piece of the Bronx's east side, has eight Democratic vying to replace Ruban Diaz Sr. Michael Beltzer, Amanda Farí, Darlee Jackson, Eliú Lara, William Moore, Mohammed Mujumder, Mirza Rashid and William Rivera are all running. Mujumder came to the U.S. from Bangladesh in the late 1980s, and is now the president of the Bangladeshi-American Community Council and managing director of Parkchester Tax Immigration and Legal Services. If elected, he plans to create a community center to provide information on government resources and programs for immigrants and citizens. City Limits Meanwhile in Brooklyn, the race for the 45th City Council District, which covers the far east end of the borough, has a much smaller candidate pool. Three Democratic candidates, Anthony Beckford, Cyril Joseph and Louis Cespedes, are running against current councilmember Farah Louis. Cyril Joseph came from St. Lucia to New York in 1967. He has worked for Action for Better Community and founded the Togetherness with Love Community Center nonprofit, which provided immigration assistance. Joseph plans on creating "educational programs where lawyers and immigration experts help immigrants learn about their rights and create change." Gotham Gazette Menendez Helped New Jersey Man Return From India Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) helped reunite Ashu Mahajan, a software solution architect on an H-1B visa, with his family after he was stranded in India for weeks due to the COVID-19 outbreak. Mahajan traveled to India last month to be with his father, who died of the virus. To return to New Jersey, he needed to receive a stamp on his paperwork from the U.S. Consulate in India, but it cancelled routine visa appointments amid the pandemic. Mahajan was told he couldn't get an appointment until February 2022. Menendez's office and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee were able to secure Mahajan an expedited appointment last week for his stamps. North Jersey Documented Talks: "Immigration Matters," Strategies for a Future Immigration System Documented and the NYC chapter of the Scholars Strategy Network will host a discussion Wednesday, June 9 at 4:30 p.m about two specific elements of the book "Immigration Matters: Movements, Visions, and Strategies for a Progressive Future," by Ruth Milkman, Deepak Bhargava and Penny Lewis. The book outlines what a more open immigration system would look like. Felipe De La Hoz, an investigative and explanatory reporter focusing on U.S. immigration, will moderate the virtual event. The panelists include Amaha Kassa, founder and Executive Director of African Communities Together, Peter L. Markowitz, Professor of Law at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and the founding faculty member and co-director of its Kathryn O. Greenberg Immigration Justice Clinic, and Ruth Milkman, Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the CUNY Graduate Center and the CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies. Register here for the free Zoom event on Wednesday, June 9 at 4:30 p.m. What News is Most Important to New York's Caribbean Communities? Documented is looking to improve coverage of issues that are important to the Caribbean community. If you'd like to give us your input to help us achieve that goal, please answer a set of questions here. Support the work of Documented Documented was founded with the goal of making sure the people affected by our stories were also the people reading them. Immigration reporting is often extractive and isn't produced or published with the main protagonists as the intended audience. Through our reporting and out outreach via WhatsApp, we've created award-winning journalism that is created with and for New York's immigrant communities. This work is not easy and it is not cheap. Consider becoming a member today to help fuel this work. By joining the Documented Community, you can not help only provide us with the financial freedom needed to fulfill our mission but also meet others who are passionate about immigration in the New York area. Become a member today. Documented NY is a non-profit news site devoted solely to covering New York City's immigrants and the policies that affect their lives.

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