Latino Immigration & Community News · Jun 23 Daily Digest
Los Angeles Policy Victory
- 🔥 Sanctuary Ordinance Upheld: A federal judge dismissed the Trump administration's lawsuit challenging Los Angeles'...

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Immigration policy, crime, and Latino community news across Colorado, Texas, New York, Los Angeles, Miami
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A first-generation Latina shares how current ICE raids and roving patrols have narrowed the gap with her father's past, making skin color a daily...
A new analysis examines how the US immigration crackdown is generating labor market friction, with broad implications for jobs, housing, and the economy amid heightened CBP border security.
The Tohono O’odham Nation's lawsuit against DHS and CBP officials underscores the tension between indigenous rights to protect sacred mountain peaks...
National and local leaders are teaming up to mobilize Latino voters ahead of November.
The Trump administration's approach is creating widespread delays across immigration systems.
Latino farmworkers faced high COVID exposure with little protection, leading to 41.2% developing long COVID that disrupts dangerous ladder work....
140 leaders from business, government and academia in both nations convened in Los Angeles to strengthen the U.S.–Mexico partnership through...
At a June 11 community forum in Greensboro, Elon Law professor Katherine Reynolds highlighted new federal guidance pushing a holistic approach to the...
Florida's no-fault system requires your own PIP coverage (minimum $10,000) to cover initial medical bills and lost wages after a crash.
Local groups are teaming up to tackle housing and food needs for families in key cities.
From Denver's rededicated La Raza Park to Hollywood leads and hidden revolutionary history, Latino communities are reclaiming spaces and narratives...
Politicians across parties are making targeted gestures toward Latino communities on immigration and business access.
Latino farmworkers endure 110-degree heat in fields while families avoid calling 911 during wildfires or floods and children suffer lung damage from smoke. The climate crisis is already here for these communities.
A USCIS memo first forced many applicants inside the U.S. to restart abroad, then partially reversed course days later.