Following President Obama’s recent announcement that his administration would look for more humane deportation practices, a group of former and currently undocumented immigrant leaders released a set of broad policy recommendations this week designed to help the White House reach its goal.
The requests are lofty, involving a heavy amount of executive authority to overhaul symptoms of the nation’s broken immigration system, as well as its root cause. But then again, curtailing a record level of deportations — approximately 2 million since Obama took office — is no easy task. Anything short of lofty likely won’t make a dent.
Chief among the recommendations, released Thursday by an independent Blue Ribbon Commission, is to expand deferred action to as many undocumented immigrants as possible in order to “keep families and communities together, and allow people to live and work without fear.”
The report asserted that a criminal record should no longer be a “categorical bar to inclusion,” for the criminal justice system disproportionately impacts low-income and minority populations. “Each individual should have the opportunity and due process to make their own case for relief, but the burden of proof of what makes a person a priority for deportation should be on the government,” the report said.
To that end, the panel recommended the president nix certain U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) programs — such as Secure Communities and the Criminal Alien Program — that it says “wrongly conflate criminal law and immigration laws, and make ICE officers a regular feature in local courtrooms, jails, and prisons around the country.”
The group also asked that the president take meaningful action to improve conditions in current detention facilities, which it said were “deplorable.”
“President Obama should direct the immediate release from custody of particularly vulnerable populations, including people who are pregnant, transgender, living with HIV/AIDS, and/or with disabilities,” the report said. “Additionally, while the DHS has adopted some rules with regards to detention standards, it should require all immigration detention facilities to implement fully and immediately the Prison Rape Elimination Act Regulations (PREA), the most recent Performance-Based National Detention Standards (PBNDS), and all other applicable safety standards and regulations in all immigration detention facilities.”









