Supreme Court Decision on 2020 Census Citizenship Question Announced
We Need Additional Southeast Asian American Language Translations for the 2020 Census
Deadline to urge your congressional rep to action is tomorrow
Rep. Lori Trahan (MA-3) is coordinating a congressional effort urging the US Census Bureau to expand translated phone and online support of 2020 Census materials in Hmong, Khmer, and Lao (in addition to the existing support for Vietnamese translations). The deadline to support Rep. Trahan’s letter has been extended to tomorrow, Wednesday, May 8. Almost 30 representatives have already signed on to the letter to help ensure an accurate count of Southeast Asian American communities — help us secure even more support!
The census is critical to ensuring that our communities are accurately counted so that our families get their fair share of government resources, political representation in Congress, and long-term opportunities for themselves and their families.
Can we count on you to take action?
ACTION ALERT:
Members of Congress Need to Hear From YOU
1. Contact your Congressional leader today.
2. Here’s what you can say:
“My name is ____ from (city, state). I am calling Representative (name) to urge him/her to sign onto a letter circulated by Rep. Lori Trahan urging the Census Bureau to expand translated phone and online support of 2020 census materials in Khmer, Lao, and Hmong. Many Southeast Asian American community members and elders who came to the US as refugees struggle with limited English proficiency, as well as poverty. We want to make sure they have the support they need to be accurately counted. Rep. Trahan’s letter has a deadline of tomorrow, May 8. Can I count on you to sign on?”
3. If your Representative is Congresswoman Lori Trahan, consider calling, emailing, or sending her a tweet to say thank you! You can say:
“My name is ____ from (city, state). As your constituent, I want to thank you for being a champion for the Southeast Asian American community by drafting a letter to the US Census Bureau urging additional phone and online translation support in Khmer, Lao, and Hmong. Thank you for your leadership in ensuring that my community is accurately counted!”
4. Sign our pledge form to count yourself in for Census 2020. The link will take you to a Google form, where you can also indicate your interest in becoming a SEARAC Census Ambassador to help ensure an accurate count from the Southeast Asian American community. Lastly, we have included survey questions to inform our planning and creation of Census 2020 materials.
Tell your Congressional Representative that We Need Additional Southeast Asian American Language Translations for the 2020 Census
ACTION ALERT: Members of Congress Need to Hear From YOU
1. Contact your Congressional leader today.
2. Here’s what you can say:“My name is ____ from (city, state). I am calling Representative (name) to urge him/her to sign onto a letter circulated by Rep. Lori Trahan urging the Census Bureau to expand translated phone and online support of 2020 census materials in Khmer, Laotian, and Hmong. Many Southeast Asian American community members and elders who came to the US as refugees struggle with limited English proficiency, as well as poverty. We want to make sure they have the support they need to be accurately counted. Rep. Trahan’s letter has a deadline of May 3. Can I count on you to sign on?”3. If your Representative is Congresswoman Lori Trahan, consider calling, emailing, or sending her a tweet to say thank you! You can say:
“My name is ____ from (city, state). As your constituent, I want to thank you for being a champion for the Southeast Asian American community by drafting a letter to the US Census Bureau urging additional phone and online translation support in Khmer, Laotian, and Hmong. Thank you for your leadership in ensuring that my community is accurately counted!”
4. Sign our pledge form to count yourself in for Census 2020. The link will take you to a Google form, where you can also indicate your interest in becoming a SEARAC Census Ambassador to help ensure an accurate count from the Southeast Asian American community. Lastly, we have included survey questions to inform our planning and creation of Census 2020 materials.
SEARAC California Update
Southeast Asian American families and communities, along with immigrant, refugee, and families of color continue to experience the relentless attacks by the Trump administration on issues of education, health, immigration, law enforcement, census, and more. We are hopeful that states like California continue to fight back with strong proposed policies to protect Californians and ensure all communities can thrive.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Policy priorities
–California complete count
–Advancing health access and care
–Education equity
–Immigrant and refugee rights
SEARAC-SPONSORED BILL
SEARAC is a co-sponsor of AB512, introduced by Assemblymember Phil Ting.
AB 512 (Ting) – Restoring ethnic and cultural accountability in county mental health
This bill would require the following –
- Each mental health plan to prepare a cultural competency assessment plan to address, among other things, disparities in access, utilization, and outcomes by race, ethnicity, language, sexual orientation, gender identity, and immigration status.
- A mental health plan to convene a committee for the purpose of reviewing and approving the cultural competency assessment plan, as described.
- A mental health plan to submit its cultural competency assessment plan to the department every 3 years for technical assistance and implementation feedback, and would require the department to post the cultural competency assessment plan submitted by each plan to its internet website.
- The State Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) to consult with the Office of Health Equity and the California Surgeon General to review county assessments and statewide performance on disparities reductions.
- The DHCS to direct an external quality review organization to develop a protocol for monitoring performance of each mental health plan, as described, and would require the plan to meet specified disparities reduction targets every 3 years.
Status:
The bill passed unanimously out of Assembly Health Committee and is moving to Assembly Appropriations Committee in May.
Take action:
To submit a letter of support, contact SEARAC Policy Associate Lee Lo at lee@searac.org.
POLICY PRIORITIES
The following are legislation that SEARAC supports:
California Census Complete Count
On Jan. 10, California Gov. Gavin Newsom proposed an additional $54 million for community outreach and education on top of the $90.3 million approved from last year’s budget. SEARAC advocates for an increase to at least $93.4 million, which would provide additional resources for community based organizations to conduct culturally relevant and linguistically appropriate community outreach and education to California’s hard-to-count communities.
Advancing Health Access and Care
Gov. Newsom proposed to expand full-scope Medi-Cal for undocumented adults, 19-25 years old. SEARAC and other advocates will be pushing for state legislation (below) that would expand full-scope Medi-Cal for undocumented population regardless of age. Additionally, advocates are requesting for a state investment of $15 million to extend funding for health navigators.
AB 4 (Arambula) & SB 29 (Durazo) – Health for all
This bill would extend eligibility for full-scope Medi-Cal benefits to individuals of all ages, if otherwise eligible for those benefits, but for their immigration status.
Status:
AB 4 will be heard in Assembly Health Committee on April 9, and SB 29 will be heard in the Senate Appropriations Committee on April 8.
Additional resources:
My Path to Health, a pilot project of the County Medical Services Program Governing Board to increase access to health treatment and preventative health care services, is currently enrolling up to 25,000 undocumented residents within 35 designated California counties.
Education Equity
SEARAC, alongside the College 4 All Coalition, are requesting for California to provide an ongoing reinvestment to build educational opportunities and public higher education access for low-income and underrepresented students through a College Readiness Block Grant that would do the following:
- Provide $200 million to public K-12 school districts and Local Educational Agencies for college readiness and competitiveness activities based on the number of students enrolled in 9-12th grades during the 2015-16 fiscal year identified as low income, foster youth, and English learners under the Local Control Funding Formula,
- Provide $20 million allocation for the University of California (UC) to promote student success and graduation through outreach, enrollment, and retention services for low-income and underrepresented students, and
- Increase 2,500 enrollment slots at the UC system.
AB 331 (Medina) – Ethnic studies high school requirement
This bill would add the completion of a one-semester course in ethnic studies, in either the subject of social studies or English, based on the model curriculum in ethnic studies developed by the Instructional Quality Commission, to the high school graduation requirements commencing with the 2023–24 school year.
Status:
The bill has moved out of Assembly Education Committee and into Assemble Appropriations.
Additional resources:
Visit California Department of Education to stay up to date on the progress of California’s Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum.
Take Action:
To submit a letter of support, contact SEARAC BMoC Coordinator Gabriel Garcia at gabriel@searac.org.
AB 1393 (Weber) – Laotian history and cultural studies
This bill would require the commission to develop and submit to the state board a model curriculum on the history and cultural study of Laotian refugees, on or before Dec. 31, 2022.
Status:
The bill will be heard in Assembly Education Committee on April 10.
Take action:
To get involved or submit a letter of support, please contact Lily Liemthongsamout at li_liem@live.com.
Immigrant and Refugee Rights
AB 1282 (Kalra) – No Private ICE Act
This bill would prohibit an officer, employee, contractor, or employee of a contractor of the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation from facilitating, allowing entry to the department’s premises, or otherwise authorizing an employee or contractor of a private security company to arrest, detain, or take into custody an individual in the department’s custody for immigration enforcement purposes.
Status:
This bill will be heard in Assembly Public Safety Committee on April 9.
MONITORING
The following are bills that we are closely watching:
SB 2 (Glazer) – Statewide Longitudinal Student Database
This bill would express the intent of the Legislature to establish the Statewide Longitudinal Student Database to collect and store data regarding individual students as they matriculate through P–20, as defined, and into the workforce. The bill would require the commission to convene a review committee for purposes of advising the commission on the establishment, implementation, funding, and ongoing administration of the database.
AB 200 (Patterson) – State veterans cemeteries for Hmong veterans
This bill would authorize the remains of a person to be buried in those cemeteries if the person was naturalized following the federal Hmong Veterans’ Naturalization Act of 2000, and was a California resident at the time of the person’s death.
AB 392 (Weber) – California act to save lives
This bill would require the following –
- Redefine the circumstances under which a homicide by a peace officer is deemed justifiable to include when the killing is in self-defense or the defense of another, consistent with the existing legal standard for self-defense, or when the killing is necessary to prevent the escape of a fleeing felon whose immediate apprehension is necessary to prevent death or serious injury.
- Additionally bar the use of this defense if the peace officer acted in a criminally negligent manner that caused the death, including if the officer’s criminally negligent actions created the necessity for the use of deadly force.
- Affirmatively prescribe the circumstances under which a peace officer is authorized to use deadly force to carry out an arrest, to prevent escape or to overcome resistance.
Status:
The bill will be heard in Assembly Public Safety Committee on April 9.
Take action:
Please visit the Alliance of Boys and Men of Color.
CONTACT
Nkauj Iab Yang, nkaujiab@searac.org
Take Action: Tell the Census Bureau We Count
Protect Southeast Asian Americans’ rights to be counted and seen
SEAA community impact
Citizenship question
Including a citizenship question puts the 2020 Census at grave risk of a significant undercount among hard-to-reach populations, like Southeast Asian American (SEAA) communities, especially in this increasingly hostile anti-immigrant political environment. The inclusion of this question undermines the accuracy of the 2020 Census and jeopardizes a full, fair, and accurate count of our communities. When communities are underrepresented, it negatively impacts their voices in government, as well as critical funding for education, healthcare, housing, and other essential programs.
Expanded race and ethnicity categories
The systemic barriers that SEAAs face are only made known through the collection and reporting of disaggregated data through the census. Without this data, the most underserved and marginalized communities in the United States remain invisible, and community needs are unmet. Expansion of race and ethnicity categories allows SEAA groups to be listed separately so that our diverse community does not become absorbed under the broader Asian American umbrella.
We need your help
Take Action: The Census Bureau Needs to Hear From YOU
Tell Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross: We do NOT want the addition of a citizenship question on the 2020 Census; we want expanded race and ethnicity categories.