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Next MBB Meetings

ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING

Date: Monday, July 9, 2007
Time: 6:00 PM
Location: Graceada Park
401 Needham Street
Modesto, CA 95354
Map: 401 Needham Street


Directions:
From Southbound 99 (Coming from North) exit Kansas Ave., L - Kansas Ave., R - N Franklin St., L - Beech St., SR - Needham St.

From Northbound 99 (Coming from South) exit CA-132/Vernalis/CA-108/Central Modesto, SL - 6th St., R - K St., L - 15th St., SL - Needham St./CA-108


EDUCATIONAL MEETING

Date: Monday, July 16, 2007
Time: 6:00 PM
Location: Beard Brook Park
South Morton Blvd.
Modesto, CA 95354
Map: [1100-1157] S. Morton Blvd.


Directions:
From Southbound 99 (Coming from North) take Tuolumne Blvd. exit, L - Tuolumne Blvd., SR - B St., R - 9th St., SL - Morton Blvd.

From Northbound 99 (Coming from South) take Tuolumne Blvd. exit, L - Tuolumne Blvd., SR - B St., R - 9th St., SL - Morton Blvd.
 

ORGANIZATIONALMEETING

Date: Monday, July 23, 2007
Time: 6:00 PM
Location: Oregon Drive Park
(East) Modesto, CA 95354
Map: 1650 Oregon Drive (Not exact)
Directions: At the corner of Oregon Drive and Empire Avenue 

 


 

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No haven for illegals in Modesto
Written by Administrator   
Friday, 20 July 2007
Modbee.com

No haven for illegals in Modesto


By EVE HIGHTOWER
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Modesto will not become the immigrant sanctuary proposed by the Modesto chapter of the Brown Berets.

The Latino rights group asked City Council members Tuesday night to pass an ordinance that would:

# Stop county staff from working with Immigration and Customs Enforcement

# Stop law enforcement from asking about people's legal status

# Require county staff or law enforcement to notify the Brown Berets and other community groups when federal agents are in the area so the groups can advise illegal immigrants.

The Brown Berets grew out of the civil rights movement of the 1960s. The local group's motto is "Culture, Community, Revolution."

Council members' decision not to take action on the proposal was no surprise to the 20 Brown Berets members and supporters who attended the meeting, organizer Ricardo Gil Jr. said. But the group intends to continue fighting for sanctuary status.

"We'll regroup and come back," Gil said after Tuesday's meeting.

The Brown Berets first took the proposal to the Stanislaus County Board of Supervisors. County CEO Rick Robinson also declined to consider the group's request, encouraging the Brown Berets to work with federal representatives instead.

In not taking action Tuesday night, City Council members also noted that immigration is a federal issue, not a city issue.

"I have no interest in overstepping our bounds," Councilwoman Kristin Olsen said.

Other cities have taken a stand on immigration. San Francisco and Oakland have declared themselves sanctuaries for 21 years by barring city staff from assisting with Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids in search of illegal immigrants.

New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston and Denver are among a growing list of cities that claim immigrant sanctuary status by, to some extent, protecting immigrants that some call "illegal" and others call "undocumented."

Joan Rutschow shook her head at the idea of Modesto adopting something similar. "We're not a nation of immigrants. We're a nation of laws," she said, quoting columnist Michelle Malkin. Rutschow said making Modesto a sanctuary is against those laws.

Activist John Mataka called the sanctuary concept and people's ability to move freely without fear of arrest or deportation a human right.

Nancy Hinton disagreed, saying it would be unfair to those who went through the process to become legal citizens.

"There's a difference between immigration and sponsoring illegal immigration," she said.

Bee staff writer Eve Hightower can be reached at 578-2382 or This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .


Posted on 07/11/07 00:00:00
http://www.modbee.com/local/story/13776825p-14357660c.html
Last Updated ( Friday, 20 July 2007 )
 
County sanctuary proposed
Written by Administrator   
Friday, 20 July 2007
Modbee.com

County sanctuary proposed


By EVE HIGHTOWER
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A civil rights group called the Brown Berets wants Stanislaus County to be an "immigrant sanctuary."

The Brown Berets wants:

The county to stop working with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Law enforcement to stop asking about people's legal status.

The county to notify the Brown Berets and other community groups when federal agents are in the area so the groups can advise illegal immigrants.

The Brown Berets is a Latino rights advocacy group that grew out of the civil rights movement of the 1960s. The Modesto Brown Berets' motto is "Culture, Community, Revolution."

Making Stanislaus County a sanctuary "would make certain that those who are living here are no longer treated like animals, being forced to live underground by the fear of deportation," said Brown Berets member Ricardo Gil Jr. He runs the activist Web site aztlanrising.com that has organized immigration protests.

The Brown Berets sent a copy of its proposed ordinance to each county supervisor.

County Chief Executive Officer Rick Robinson declined the group's request this week, encouraging it to work with federal representatives instead.

In a phone interview, Robinson said immigration is beyond the supervisors' authority and the ordinance would limit the county.

"Counties don't make laws that would override federal and state laws," he said. "With this (ordinance), local government officials would be precluded from cooperating with ICE. That's certainly not good pol-icy."

The Brown Berets then submitted their request to Modesto City Council members Wednesday.

City Manager George Britton, who hadn't seen the request, said it could be discussed during a meeting if the group asks the city clerk to put the proposal on the council agenda.

If the council were to pass the ordinance, it wouldn't be the first to do so. Some cities already have achieved sanctuary status.

In May, the Watsonville City Council agreed to the group's three points. In April, San Francisco and Oakland reaffirmed their pledges that no city em-ployee will participate in federal immigration raids. They have been sanctuaries for 21 years.

New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston and Denver also are among a growing list of cities large and small that claim immigrant sanctuary status by, to some extent, protecting immigrants labeled "illegal" by federal law. Most commonly, sanctuary cities agree not to ask people about their immigration status.

Deputies don't routinely ask

Sheriff Adam Christianson said Stanislaus County deputies don't routinely ask about people's status.

"Our investigators aren't worried about immigration status," he said. "They're worried about protecting everyone," he said.

The Brown Berets also want Stanislaus County to cease working with ICE.

"We currently have an ICE agent assigned to our county and work closely with him and are happy to do so," said Chief Dep-uty District Attorney John Goold.

That relationship does not include helping with raids.

"Our resources are stretched thin trying to catch real criminals," Goold said.

While immigration enforcement isn't local agencies' responsibility, they can cross-designate deputies to function as ICE agents. Christianson said he isn't interested in doing that with deputies on the street.

"It's not my job," he said, adding that he doesn't care about people's immigration status unless they're in jail.

Brown Berets also wants the county to notify groups when ICE is in the area. Christianson said that's not his responsibility either.

Local agencies may not know when ICE is in the area, said Modesto police Sgt. Craig Gund-lach.

"They have federal jurisdiction. They don't have a duty to notify us or anyone of what they are doing," he added.

Bee staff writer Eve Hightower can be reached at 578-2382, or This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .


Posted on 06/23/07 00:00:00
http://www.modbee.com/local/story/13720370p-14306089c.html
Last Updated ( Friday, 20 July 2007 )
 
Immigration demonstrators rally on May Day
Written by Administrator   
Wednesday, 02 May 2007

A Call for Unity

Immigration demonstrators rally on May Day

BART AH YOU/THE BEE

The 'May Day Movement' rally Tuesday drew hundreds of immigrant rights activists to Modesto. Above, Victor Espinoza of Modesto hoists a flag banner while marching on Crows Landing Road.
BART AH YOU/THE BEE

Rally participants gather at 10th Street Plaza.


Dominick Olidem, 4, joins the rally.

By EVE HIGHTOWER
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Last Updated: May 2, 2007, 07:12:43 AM PDT Demonstrators turned out by the hundreds in Modesto on May Day to demand a path to citizenship for an estimated 12 million people who are in the United States illegally, but the crowd was far from the thousands that marched a year ago.

Starting at Crows Landing and Hatch roads, activists marched to City Hall, where they filled 10th Street Plaza. Then they walked back to their starting point, carrying with them the message that no human being is illegal.

"¡Únete!"

In Spanish, Jesús Alberto Gonzalez urged passers-by to "unite" with demonstrators by joining a group that started with about 100 people at 10 a.m. and multiplied as the sun warmed the crisp morning air.

Immigration rallies held across the country Tuesday produced only a fraction of the million-plus protesters who turned out last year. Fear about raids and frustration that the marches haven't pushed Congress to pass reform kept many at home, organizers said.

In Los Angeles, where several hundred thousand turned out last year, about 25,000 attended the first of two rallies, police said. At an evening rally, police arrested several people they said threw rocks and bottles at officers.

In Chicago, where more than 400,000 swarmed the streets a year earlier, police said Tuesday's crowd numbered about 150,000, by far the largest turnout nationwide.

There were sizable demonstrations in Seattle, New York, Miami and Phoenix as well.

In Modesto, with children in tow and flags from many countries hoisted in the air, immigrant rights activists marched the seven-mile route declaring along the way that illegal immigrants are not terrorists and they are not leaving.

Anjelica Mendoza, 14, of Modesto left school early to add her voice to the chorus calling for an open border, amnesty for illegal immigrants and civil rights.

"I'm learning more today about my people than I would be sitting in a classroom," she said.

While Mendoza is a first-generation Nicaraguan-American, Santiago Caldera, 30, of Ceres joined in the rally as an illegal immigrant.

"I'm here for a better future," Caldera said in Spanish.

In response to the view that illegal immigrants abuse U.S. support services, Caldera said he works hard at his roofing job and came to the United States in part because he feels the Mexican government takes advantage of its people.

"There's more opportunity here," said Caldera, who added that he was caught once before successfully crossing the desert for what he calls a fair, honest living in the United States.

The Modesto Brown Berets and Aztlan Rising orchestrated the "May Day Movement" rally. The groups also dispensed literature opposing proposed legislation called the Strive Act, which would make evading inspection a criminal penalty, bar illegals from temporary protection if convicted of gang crimes, strengthen border control, and more.

"The No. 1 thing we want people to get from this is that we are the indigenous people of this continent, and we deserve the right to live anywhere on this continent," said Ricardo Gil Jr., who manages the activist Web site Aztlan Rising.

Among other things, protesters spoke out against plans for a guest-worker program. They also called for reunifying deported people with their families in the United States and ending deportation of illegal immigrants.

"No human being is illegal," Salvador Vera shouted into the crowd outside of City Hall before they gathered their signs, flags and children and finished the march.

Beestaff writer Eve Hightowercan be reached at 578-2382 or This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it '; document.write( '' ); document.write( addy_text88507 ); document.write( '<\/a>' ); //-->\n This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

 

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 02 May 2007 )
 
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