Language Selection

CJJC: Causa Justa / Just Cause - Unity is Power
CJJC & Grassroots Global Justice Highlights

 

Here are some highlights from CJJC’s recent trip to the Grassroots Global Justice Alliance Congress, in Raleigh, North Carolina. Photos by CJJC’s Patricia Zamora. The GGJ, 2011 Member Congress, was hosted by Black Workers for Justice. GGJ is a national alliance of grassroots organizations working for peace, democracy and a sustainable planet.

Read more...
 
10th Street Home: WEEK 1!


10_St._House2_rma_12_10_11The “Occupy Our Homes” national day of action on December 6th saw unprecedented numbers of homeowners taking action to take back or keep their homes.

On that day, the 99% and Occupy Oakland activists took over a Fannie Mae-owned vacant property at 1415 10th Street in historic West Oakland that is now being used as housing for formerly homeless folks and for community meeting space with support of CJJC.

This Saturday, Dec. 10, at least 60+ people turned out at the house, some of them young children and their parents for a story time circle organized by the Colorful Mamas, while other folks came for the membership meeting where participants shared their stories about their fights against foreclosures and to offer support.

The neighbors have been extremely supportive and the broader community as well. With the help of a crew of volunteer plumbers from the neighborhood and from Occupy Oakland, the plumbing now works!
Contact us at: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Take Action, Sign the Petition! If you have already signed, CALL Fannie Mae on Tuesday, December 13th. Read more below....

Take Action Now
The 10th Street home was occupied to pressure Fannie Mae into giving back the deed to the Ramirez family whose home was foreclosed on earlier this year.Ramirezson55

The loan servicer, Bank of America, pretended to negotiate with Margarita Ramirez, a CJJC member and domestic worker from East Oakland. Instead, they sold the home two weeks early. Thanks to your support in July B of A agreed to rescind the sale & modify the loan, but Fannie Mae is now standing in our way.
Neighborhood activists are occupying the vacant house as leverage to pressure Fannie Mae to return the Ramirez family’s deed.

Return the Deed!
If you agree that Fannie Mae should give the Ramirez family their home back, help us pressure Fannie Mae into doing the right thing. Please sign this petition and pass it along to your networks. We need to get as many people as possible to sign this petition to show that the Ramirez family has the support of a huge community who will not stand by idly while Fannie Mae allows families' home to be stolen.
 

As a government program, Fannie Mae should be working with families to help them keep their homes. 

And... if you agree that enough is enough, call Warren Harris, the Northern California Foreclosure Coordinator on Tuesday at: 562-235-1874. Let him know that he needs to commit to retrieving the deed for the Ramirez home. 

Here's what to say:

"I'm a supporter of the home occupation to get the Ramirez family their deed, and I am a member of the 99%.

I'm demanding that you start the process to retrieve the deed for the Ramirez Family at 2586 63rd Ave, Oakland CA, and contact Causa Justa :: Just Cause as soon as possible to update them on the status of the deed."


10th Street House Needs Items/Donations to Stay Strong!
10th_St._House_bilingual_12_10_11

If you can donate some items, here are our most urgent needs for the house.

Please let us know. Email us at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or give us a call at 510.239.3460 or drop them off between 11am-8pm daily.

    • Portable Heaters

Food for the House & Community

Blankets, Beddings

Clothes

Personal Hygiene/Toiletries/Baby Wipes

First Aid Kit

Kitchen Supplies

Dish towels, dish rack

Dishes, cups and glasses

Microwave

Trash, Recycle & Compost

Lamps

Toilet seats (2, one for each bathroom), plungers

Cleaning Supplies

Stair Repairs

Curtains and Window Coverings

Door Knobs

Fire Extinguisher

Office Supplies

Furniture

Tools & Garden Tools

Books, Newspapers, Magazines (for Occupy Oakland Library)

Books, Toys & Stuff for Kids

 

Or DONATE FUNDS to help us support this work.

Thank You!

 
UCSF: Give Mr. Navarro his Kidney Transplant!

Dear Friends,

We are contacting you today to ask for your immediate support.

Jesus Navarro, a recently laid off Pacific Steel Worker, was denied a Kidney Transplant by UC San Francisco Medical Center citing his undocumented status. He had insurance, a donor who is his wife, and was next on the waiting list. Since the story broke (at the bottom of the email), organizations and concerned and outraged individuals have come forward to support Mr. Navarro and his family.

On behalf of ACUDIR (Alameda County United in Defense of Immigrant Rights) and the Pacific Steel Worker Committee,  we are asking you to: Take a stand for justice and demand that UCSF Immediately provide the Kidney Transplant Treatment and all Subsequent Necessary Care to Jesus Navarro, and to Stop Using Immigration Status as a Basis for Denying Care to Any Patient. His life and the lives of hundreds depend on this.

We are sending the letter to UCSF tomorrow at Noon and would like your signatures no later than 11am. Please email your organizational and/or individual sign on to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Thanks for your support.

Cinthya

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Letter

To:

Susan Desmond-Hellmann, Chancellor

Reece Fawley, executive director of transplantation

University of California at San Francisco

Sherry Lansing, Chair

University of California Board of Regents

 

We Demand that UCSF Immediately Provide Transplant Treatment and all Subsequent Necessary Care to Jesus Navarro, and to Stop Using Immigration Status as a Basis for Denying Care to Any Patient

TWe, the undersigned, express our outrage that UCSF has used the immigration status of Jesus Navarro to deny him transplant services needed to save his life, and for which he is clearly eligible.  This is a basic violation of his human rights, essentially condemning him to die because of his immigration status.

People have a right to medical care, regardless of immigration status.  It is unacceptable to our community that you deny care on this basis, especially because the death of Mr. Navarro is a likely consequence of it. Your actions violate international human rights law, and the sanctuary policy and other measures passed by the city of San Francisco, in which your center is located, which call for human rights and equality of treatment for all people, regardless of immigration status.

Our community, which supports the UC system through the taxes we pay, stands for equality and human rights for all people who live here, regardless of immigration status.  You are a public institution, and we hold you accountable to our community for this outrageous action.

We demand that you immediately provide the necessary transplant needed by Mr. Navarro.  Because your actions have inexcusably delayed his treatment, and as a result, he may lose his medical insurance during the time of recovery, we further demand that you provide all follow-up care and needed medicine, regardless of whether the cost is covered by medical insurance.

We further demand that you make a public statement that you will no longer ask any patient about their immigration status, that you will no longer deny care based on immigration status, and that you will take affirmative steps to ensure that all patients at UCSF are treated equally without regard to their nationality or immigration status.

Signed


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Article

http://www.contracostatimes.com/news/ci_19854392

No kidney transplant for dying East Bay dad who is illegal immigrant

By Hannah Dreier
Contra Costa Times
Posted:   01/30/2012 04:15:22 PM PST
Updated:   01/31/2012 07:12:41 AM PST

Immigration status complicates transplant
Jesus Navarro, an undocumented immigrant from Mexico, dons a surgical mask to prevent infection while connecting to a machine to start his daily home dialysis treatment, Monday, Jan. 9, 2012, in Oakland, Calif. (D. Ross Cameron/Staff)
  • Without a new kidney, Jesus Navarro will die.
The Oakland man has a willing donor and private insurance to pay for the transplant. But he faces what may be an insurmountable hurdle in the race to save his life: He is an illegal immigrant.

Administrators at UC San Francisco Medical Center are refusing to transplant a kidney from Navarro's wife, saying there is no guarantee he will receive adequate follow-up care, given his uncertain status.

Their decision is a stark illustration of the tension between health care and immigration policies in the state and underscores the difficult role medical professionals play in trying to save the lives of undocumented residents.

Though no data are available, anecdotal evidence suggests clinics sometimes perform organ transplants on illegal immigrants, especially when the patients are young. In one high-profile case, UCLA Medical Center gave an undocumented woman three liver transplants before she turned 21.

But health administrators also reject patients because of their immigration status, though that usually happens when the patients lack insurance. Bellevue Hospital in New York attracted attention last year when it refused to transplant a kidney between brothers because they could not pay for the operation.

It is the kind of ethical gray area that hospitals hate, said University of Pennsylvania bioethics professor Arthur Caplan.

"It puts the doctors in a very awkward and torn position," he said. "You come into this trying to do good and find yourself stuck in the middle of a fight about immigration."

Immigrant advocates and some scholars say it is wrong for hospitals to withhold health care from the seriously ill, no matter their legal status.

But proponents of tougher border enforcement -- and those fighting to contain ballooning health care costs -- fear that providing such services could lure more undocumented immigrants.

Navarro, 35, never thought his survival would hinge on his immigration status. He has had private insurance through Berkeley's Pacific Steel foundry for 14 years.

When his kidneys began to shut down eight years ago, he continued to work full time. Each evening, he would cleanse his blood of lethal toxins using a home dialysis machine.

But the soft-spoken metalworker has been growing sicker. Life expectancy for dialysis patients hovers around six years.

This spring, the family got a call from UCSF's transplant center: Navarro had reached the top of the waitlist.

"We were so happy," recalled his wife, who went with him for the final work-up.

But in their final consultation before the surgery, Navarro says doctors discovered his immigration status and called off the operation.

"I started crying and crying and crying," said his wife, who asked that her name be withheld because she is also in the country illegally. She offered her own kidney -- and was a match -- but administrators again said no.

UCSF declined to comment on Navarro's case, but Executive Director of Transplantation Reece Fawley said in a statement that the clinic evaluates all patients for socioeconomic stability.

"UCSF's policy for financial clearance requires candidates to present evidence of adequate and stable insurance coverage or other financial sources necessary to sustain follow-up care long after transplant surgery," she said. "Immigration status is among many factors taken into consideration."

Navarro was caught up in an immigration audit and lost his foundry job earlier this month. His private insurance continues for now, and he is trying to extend it. But he may well end up on the state's Medi-Cal program.

That would deepen Navarro's dilemma. While Medi-Cal will cover his daily dialysis -- which now costs $17,000 a month -- because of his illegal status, it will not pay for the immunosuppressive drugs that ward off organ rejection. The drugs cost $20,000 annually. Medi-Cal also won't pay for organ transplants for illegal immigrants.

The hospital won't perform the transplant without a guarantee that the drugs and accompanying treatment will be paid for.

Some bioethicists say the hospital should have performed the surgery because Navarro would not be taking resources away from other patients or putting his wife at serious risk.

After all, many legal residents fail to follow their post-surgical plan.

"Why was this patient denied the opportunity to comply?" asked Santa Clara University bioethics professor Margaret McLean.

Other experts suggest that the possibility of saving a life should outweigh concerns about follow-up care.

"He has the organ -- the critical resource -- if he can get it transplanted," said University of Southern California bioethics professor Michael Shapiro. "That's a serious chance at life."

But critics say that providing any long-term care to illegal immigrants is irresponsible and discourages home countries from investing in an adequate health system.

"You just cannot provide care for illegal aliens without getting into uncompensated care," said Bob Dane of the Federation for American Immigration Reform.

Navarro says his chief concern is finding a new job, not the quest to save his life. But he also worries for his family and takes anti-anxiety pills to sleep.

If transplant doctors working with illegal immigrants are in a bind, so are the Navarros.

"We don't know what to do," said Navarro's wife, watching her husband chase after their 3-year-old daughter. "It's like we're on a ledge -- we can't go here or there."

Contact Hannah Dreier at 510-262-2787. Follow her at Twitter.com/hannahdreier

Increased regulation on the horizon
The nonprofit group that manages the nation's organ transplant system is considering increasing its oversight of transplants to noncitizens.
The United Network for Organ Sharing currently does not limit the percentage of organs that clinics can transplant to immigrants. That is partly because nonresidents donate more organs than they receive.
Over a 20-year period, illegal immigrants donated 2.5 percent of organs and received fewer than 1 percent, according to a 2008 study published by the American Medical Association.
The network reserves the right to audit the rare clinic that gives more than 5 percent of organs to nonresident patients. The concern is that a transplant center might start bringing in wealthy "transplant tourists" from other countries to make money.
"Regardless of our policy, it is always the decision of any transplant center," said network spokesman Joel Newman.
The organization is considering a new rule that would require clinics to provide detailed accounts of the immigrants they serve and allow the organization to review all nonresident transplants.
The goal would be to distinguish patients traveling to the United States for a transplant from those noncitizens who live in the country and thus are more likely to donate organs to U.S. citizens.
-- Hannah Dreier

 
We Have Moved Down the Street!

bluechurch

OUR WEST OAKLAND OFFICE HAS MOVED!

After two years in the California Hotel, the building is undergoing major renovations so we need to move. Luckily, we found a great space right down the street!

Come visit us at our new street address:

3268 San Pablo Avenue

Oakland, CA 94608

Our SF and East Oakland offices are still the same and you can still reach us at the same mailing address and contact information in Oakland:

PO Box 3596

Oakland, CA 94609

Phone: 510-763-5877

Tenant Hotline: 510-TENANTS

Foreclosure Hotline: 510-318-7391

www.cjjc.org

AND

Join us For a Office Warming Party

Friday, March 2nd 5-7pm

Rsvp to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Friend us on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter at causajusta1

 
Congresswoman calls for investigation of enforcement program
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com 

April 22, 2011

A California congresswoman Friday called for an investigation into the actions of federal immigration officials, saying they lied about whether counties and states had the right to opt out of a controversial nationwide enforcement program that screens for illegal immigrants in local jails.

"It is inescapable that the [Department of Homeland Security] was not honest with the local governments or with me" about whether local jurisdictions must participate, said Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-San Jose). "You can’t have a government department essentially lying to local government and to members of Congress. This is not OK."

The so-called Secure Communities program, launched in 2008, was promoted to local and state leaders as a way to focus enforcement efforts on "serious convicted criminals." But the program, which uses fingerprint data, has come under fire because it has ensnared a high proportion of immigrants who were arrested but never charged or who have been charged with minor infractions.

Critics say it discourages illegal immigrants from reporting crimes and opens the door to racial profiling.

A number of local jurisdictions -– including Santa Clara and San Francisco counties -– have sought to opt out of the program or asked that their fingerprint data not be sent to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Federal officials initially told them they could do so, an assertion repeated by Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and Assistant Atty. Gen. Ronald Weich in September letters to Lofgren.
But internal correspondence recently released to immigrant and civil rights groups in response to Freedom of Information Act litigation reveals that ICE officials had long known that the program was not voluntary.

A month after Lofgren received the letters, Napolitano held a news conference to clarify that local officials had no say in the program.

Lofgren, whose legal staff spent a week reviewing the internal documents, said she will seek a probe of whether Napolitano or ICE Director John Morton were aware of the strategy.

"It’s unacceptable and if she knew about it, something has to be done about her, and, if she didn’t, she has to do something about those who did," Lofgren said. "Clearly the people in the department were dissembling and deceiving."

A Department of Homeland Security official said in a statement that "Secure Communities is not voluntary and never has been. Unfortunately, this was not communicated as clearly as it should have been to state and local jurisdictions by ICE when the program began. Thanks to outreach with local jurisdictions and members of Congress, we have since made the parameters of the program clear to all stakeholders involved."

Lofgren also questioned the legal authority for implementing the program, which by 2013 will effectively involve all local jails in immigration enforcement. The rollout began in 2008 and 1,211 jurisdictions in 41 states now participate. States have always shared local fingerprint data with the FBI, which conducts criminal background checks.

Under Secure Communities, the FBI now shares that data with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Homeland Security’s investigative arm.

An ICE spokesman said the program does not require local or state approval, since it is "fundamentally an information sharing program between federal partners."

But officials sought for nearly two years to cajole local jurisdictions to support the program -– before telling them they had no choice but to participate.

ICE also has signed "memorandums of agreement" with states that currently forward local fingerprint data to the FBI. Homeland Security officials now say those agreements are merely educational and that fingerprints from all jails will be forwarded by the FBI to ICE by 2013.

Santa Clara County’s Board of Supervisors voted unanimously not to participate before being told they had no choice. San Francisco’s sheriff also sought unsuccessfully to opt out. They oppose the program because they contend it erodes community policing efforts by ensnaring all undocumented immigrants booked into jail –- regardless of the severity of the crime.

Recently released data show that half of the immigration holds issued since the inception of the Secure Communities program have been for non-criminals or those charged with misdemeanors -- not the violent criminals the program has purported to prioritize

Lofgren said Friday that if communities had known from the beginning that they had no choice in the matter, they probably would have fought the program in court. But the repeated assertions -– which continued through October -– that locals had a mechanism for opting out deceived them.
"Had they been honest to begin with, the localities that feel strongly about this would have challenged their legal authority early on," she said. "They tried to play by the rules. Unfortunately they didn’t realize that the department was not on the level."

Chris Newman, legal director of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, among the groups that sued in federal court to obtain Secure Communities data and correspondence, said he was "grateful for the congresswoman’s attempt to get to the bottom of this" and called on the Obama administration to freeze the program pending further study.   

--Lee Romney reporting from San Francisco

 
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JOIN US!
We invite you to get inspired and spread the word! Our work is about building a movement and you are part of it, so get involved and stay informed.
Mailing: PO Box 3596, Oakland, CA 94609
West Oakland: 3463 San Pablo Avenue, Oakland, CA 94608 | 510.763.5877 (p) 510.763.5824 (f)
East Oakland: 9124 International Blvd. Oakland, CA 94603
San Francisco: 2301 Mission Street, Suite 201, San Francisco, CA 94110 | 415.487.9203 (p) 415.487.9022 (f)
info@cjjc.org