NEWSLETTERS

VAAP VAAP

May 2024

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
View this email in your browser

VAAP NEWSLETTER


MAY 2024
Facebook
Website
Instagram
LinkedIn
Email

UPDATES FROM OUR TEAM

Greetings, friends of Vermont Asylum Assistance Project! We have so many exciting developments to report from May. Chief among them, VAAP's staff has DOUBLED in size as we welcomed the inimitable Marnie Avila Alvarez, LLM (she/her/ella) to our team and then, with her help, oriented four superstar interns to spend 10 weeks supporting VAAP this summer. More on our growing staff below, and more on our fabulous intern team in our June newsletter. Stay tuned!

We also hosted a handful of advocates at our second monthly case rounds on Zoom; scheduled three self-help clinics for dozens of unrepresented asylum seekers seeking help from an attorney-for-a-day; placed two emergency-file and two more LGBTQ+ asylum seekers with advocates for full pro bono representation; spoke at South Burlington High School's Law Day and at University of Vermont's new interdisciplinary immigration justice program; marched alongside Migrant Justice on May Day in solidarity with Milk with Dignity; and finalized plans for a first-for-Vermont public education symposium, flyer below.

The June 14th "Welcoming New Americans" Symposium is FREE and HYBRID online/in-person and OPEN TO ALL. Please JOIN US and bring your friends, neighbors, and organizations! Download the flyer here.


 

We're keeping plenty busy here at VAAP in part to stave off the heaviness of bearing witness to global genocides that force migration, overlayed with the anti-immigrant vitriol of the accelerating U.S. presidential election. Counter-balancing misinformation about asylum seeking in the U.S., and helping noncitizen survivors of foreign torture and trauma to retell their stories and secure asylum here in VT, are the core of our legal work here at VAAP. 

We appreciate what an exceedingly difficult time this is in our shared history, and we encourage our supporters to not only give what you can, but to also take what you need. How can VAAP support you during this time? At a minimum, VAAP is here to help you think globally while acting locally, and to share in the group project of making Vermont a more welcoming, equitable, and inclusive place for our most diverse community members. 

Read on for more VAAP news including upcoming training opportunities, invitations to volunteer as attorney-for-a-day, a partner organization feature, staff highlights, fact checks, and more. Visit our website for rolling updates on how we're carrying out our mission and what we're accomplishing, events we're scheduling, or to review past newsletters.

FACT CHECK!

We offer thanks to the lawmakers and organizers who made the 2024 Vermont Legislative Session such a productive one for advancing immigrants' rights. Visit our website for a complete rundown of all local immigration-related law and policy developments that stand to improve the lived experience of Vermont noncitizens, regardless of where they stand on their immigration legal journey. We are fortunate to live in a state that leads the nation in advancing immigrants' rights, especially at a time when many other states are remaining silent in the face of an intractably harmful federal system or, worst of all, affirmatively passing laws to criminalize and further endanger the experience of immigrants in their communities. Take a look at this complete list of this session's worker, healthcare, and education rights advancements, increased protections against the criminalization of immigration and immigration-status discrimination, and the increased enfranchisement of noncitizen Vermonters.

At the federal level, VAAP is closely monitoring how the Biden Administration's new expedited processing policy for Boston Immigration Court may or may not impact case processing for Vermont noncitizens. Recall that the Administration recently announced its plan to transfer venue of proceedings for all respondents' who report a Vermont-based zip code to the Lowell Immigration Court in Chelmsford, MA. Transfers to Lowell are well underway, and several VAAP clients have already appeared for master calendar hearings there. On June, 4, 2024, VAAP heard from the Assistant Chief Immigration Judge for Boston and Lowell that Boston's new "recent arrivals" accelerated docket should not include noncitizens with a Vermont address nor individuals who arrived before May 2024. The ACIJ confirmed that no such accelerated docket is being created at Lowell. This means a Vermont noncitizen scheduled for removal proceedings in Boston, whether part of the "recent arrivals" accelerated docket or not, can ask their Immigration Judge to "change venue" of their proceedings to Lowell Immigration Court, where their case will be subject to routine case processing speeds at a court that is slightly more accessible geographically to Vermont. 

Meanwhile, we recommend that folks with Immigration Court proceedings continue to regularly monitor their case status using the DOJ self-help case status portalhttps://acis.eoir.justice.gov/en/, and take care not to miss any court hearings to avoid the risk of being ordered removed in your absence (in abstentia)


Finally, regarding the breaking news that President Biden has signed today an executive order severely restricting asylum seeking at the U.S. border, VAAP is monitoring the story and will be prepared to share updates and analysis of the proclamation, available here, at the June 14th symposium and beyond. 

ADVOCATE SPOTLIGHT

                                     

Last month, VAAP warmly welcomed to our staff our newest advocate, Paralegal Advocate/Program Coordinator Marnie Avila Alvarez, LLM (she/her, ella). Marnie is a Cuban lawyer who earned her law degree magna cum laude in 2014 from the Havana University Faculty of Law. After earning her LLM in 2023 at Vermont Law and Graduate School, she is now reading for the bar through Vermont Law Office Study and pursuing Board of Immigration Appeals Recognition and Accreditation to practice immigration law federal agencies in the meantime.

Marnie's legal career is marked by a deep commitment to serving marginalized communities and advocating for their rights. She previously focused her legal practice on international business, trade, and energy law until 2021, when she was accepted as a Global Energy/LLM Fellow at Vermont Law and Graduate School’s Institute for Energy and the Environment. With a background in energy law and a focus on sustainability, she has been deeply involved in legal research, writing, and case management related to clean energy solutions, renewable energy projects, regulatory compliance, and environmental law. 

Marnie developed a keen interest in U.S. immigration law over the course of her own resettlement in Vermont, yielding skills and experiences that she promptly paid forward by offering support to other individuals navigating the U.S. immigration system. In 2022, Marnie co-founded the Alviera Group LLC, a company dedicated to assisting immigrants in establishing themselves legally, economically, and socially in the United States, with a strong commitment towards supporting clean energy access and energy efficiency solutions for the immigrant community in the country. 

Marnie's professional experience spans both private practice and nonprofit settings, giving her a well-rounded understanding of legal issues from multiple perspectives. Her ability to connect with clients, understand their needs, and provide effective legal assistance make her a most valuable asset to the VAAP team. Furthermore, she brings teaching experience to her role, serving as an adjunct faculty at the Vermont Law and Graduate School’s Institute for Energy and the Environment, and having previously served as a law professor at Havana University Faculty of Law. Her dedication to educating future legal professionals reflects her commitment to fostering a more just and equitable legal system. This includes her commitment of supporting and developing a more robust international students’ community in Vermont. 

In her new role at VAAP, Marnie is poised to make a significant impact for our fledgling organization by leveraging her legal skills, energy focus, and passion for immigration law to support asylum seekers and advocate for their rights in the United States. Please join us in warmly welcoming Marnie to the team!

 



                                      

Furthermore, come September 2024, VAAP will also welcome a third incredible advocate to our staff, Immigrant Justice Corps Fellow Cameron Briggs Ramos (she/her, ella). Cameron will join VAAP as the state's and Vermont Law and Graduate School's first-ever Immigrant Justice Corps Fellow. Her focus will be growing VAAP's direct legal services practice, beginning with universal representation for "unaccompanied children" who are navigating immigration removal proceedings in Vermont. Happy Graduation, Cameron! We cannot wait to welcome you soon.

PARTNER SPOTLIGHT

                                            

Community Asylum Seekers Project (CASP) and the Ethiopian Community Development Council (ECDC) are two southern Vermont organizations supporting the safe resettlement of asylum seekers and refugees in Vermont. ECDC is one of the state's designated refugee resettlement support organizations for individuals arriving in Vermont with "refugee" status. CASP is one of the state's community-based organizations that emerged to offer comparable supports to asylum seeking Vermonters awaiting a "refugee" determination by the U.S. government. 

                                         

VAAP is mentoring paralegal advocates at both partner organizations to assist our mutual client communities with filing initial asylum applications, work permit applications and renewals, applications for derivative beneficiary family members, and green card applications for asylees and refugees with a year or more in that status. Subscribe to our newsletters and/or monitor our websites closely to learn more about upcoming self-help clinics, community education opportunities, and other collaborative events that VAAP is partnering with CASP and ECDC to deliver to advance our common goal of improving Vermont noncitizens' access to immigration counsel.

PRO BONO TRAINING

Earn CLEs with us at the VBA Meeting on 9/27!

After hosting VAAP for two highly attended continuing legal education (CLE) seminars this month, the Vermont Bar Association (VBA) has welcomed VAAP to present an "immigration intersections" themed session at its upcoming September 27th meeting in Fairlee, Vermont. Save the date! As always, participating means CLE credit, supporting our wonderful Bar, and spending an early fall day at the gorgeous Lake Morey Resort. See you there!


 



Join us at our 6/14  Welcoming New Americans Symposium!

You and your organizations are warmly invited to an English-language multidisciplinary symposium covering the ins and outs of welcoming recently arrived immigrants to Vermont. People classed as "refugees" are eligible for government-sponsored resettlement supports—but what about people who are seeking asylum to become a "refugee," who comprise the majority of individuals facing immigration removal proceedings today? This interactive, practical symposium on June 14 will cover the law, practice, and experience of asylum-seeking in Vermont.



Scroll up to the top of this newsletter for the full program agenda and speaker list. In-person attendance is limited, so register ASAP to secure your spot. Thanks to our generous sponsors, registration is FREE, lunch and refreshments will be served, and Continuing Legal Education (CLE) credit is pending. If you can't join us in person, we will stream online and also record for those who RSVP.  Co-sponsored by the Vermont Asylum Seeker Network community-based organizations, Vermont Afghan Alliance, Vermont Law and Graduate School's Center for Justice Reform Clinic, and Vermont Asylum Assistance Project.



Complete our online training!

In Fall 2023, the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project partnered with Vecina, a Texas-based nonprofit founded with the mission to “empower immigrant justice advocates through mentoring attorneys, educating communities, and mobilizing volunteers.”  We are excited to share that Vecina has designed two online training modules that are available to VAAP pro bono attorneys. The first module is an overview of affirmative asylum and the second trains attorneys to conduct in-depth asylum client intakes. We are so grateful to Vecina for these resources and look forward to sharing them with pro bono attorneys who are interested in volunteering with us.  Please email us for details on how to access these trainings.

Facebook
Website
Instagram
LinkedIn
Email

GET INVOLVED

Updated Pro Bono FAQs and Pro Se Asylum Clinics

If you are interested in volunteering your time by providing an asylum seeker with free legal help, but you're not quite sure where to start, check out these Frequently Asked Questions which we'll keep updated on a rolling basis. Next, email us for access to our pro bono email list serv and insiders-only Resource SharePoint.



Not ready to take a case for full representation without some practice experience under your belt? Start by volunteering as an attorney-for-a-day at one of our upcoming pro se assistance clinics. The next one is June 13th at the Vermont Law and Graduate School's Burlington Office. We'll be training and supervising pro bono attorneys to assist pro se asylum seekers with with applications on USCIS Form I-589. We'll handle intake and language access, you just RSVP! Refreshments will be served!

Our next two self help clinics will be June 22nd at the Mobile Mexican Consulate in Montpelier and at the July 13th Justicia Migrant Torneo de Futbol (Migrant Justice's annual soccer tournament and community celebration). Join us!

Donate to VAAP

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!

- THE VAAP TEAM

MEET OUR TEAM
Jill Martin Diaz (they/them), elle), Executive Director is VAAP's supervising attorney and first full-time paid staff. They come to VAAP from Vermont Law and Graduate School where they taught doctrinal and clinical immigration law and directed the Center for Justice Reform Clinic. Previously, Jill practiced as a Vermont Poverty Law Fellow at Vermont Legal Aid and an Immigrant Justice Corps Fellow at Sanctuary for Families New York. The National LGBTQ+ Bar Association recognized Jill’s achievements by honoring them as one of 2023’s Top 40 Lawyers Under 40. They speak English and Spanish and are licensed to practice in New York, Vermont, and the District of Vermont.
Marnie Avila Alvarez (she/her, ella) is a Cuban lawyer who is completing Vermont Law Office Study as VAAP's inaugural Paralegal Advocate and Program Coordinator. In 2014, she earned her law degree magna cum laude from the Havana University Faculty of Law and in 2023 completed her LLM as a Global Energy Fellow at Vermont Law and Graduate School’s Institute for Energy and the Environment.. Marnie has been deeply involved in legal research, writing, and case management related to renewable energy projects, regulatory compliance, and environmental law. In addition, she has experience handling immigration cases, providing support to individuals navigating the immigration system, and advocating for fair and just immigration policies. In 2022, Marnie co-founded Alviera Group LLC, which assists immigrants to establish themselves legally, economically, and socially in the United States, while supporting clean energy access and energy efficiency solutions for the immigrant community. Marnie serves as adjunct faculty at VLGS, teaching their Global Sustainability Field Class to Cuba every year.
Becky Wasserman (she/her), Board Member is an attorney and the Executive Director of the VT Saves Program in the Office of the State Treasurer. Becky started working with asylum seekers more than ten years ago through her law school’s immigration clinic. Since then she has worked in a pro bono capacity on a number of immigration matters, including volunteering at the southern border in 2018 and 2019. In 2021, she co-founded the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, with Kate Paarlberg-Kvam. 
Kate Paarlberg-Kvam (she/they), Board Member is the Executive Director of the Milk With Dignity Standards Council. She has a PhD in Latin American Studies, and spent ten years teaching college prior to directing the Community Asylum Seekers Project (CASP) in Brattleboro, VT. In that role Kate learned firsthand the transformative power of legal representation for asylum seekers, and worked with CASP to co-found the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project with Rebecca Wasserman. Kate now directs the Milk with Dignity Standards Council, a Burlington-based nonprofit working to ensure the human rights of Vermont's dairy workers. Kate has worked as a researcher and a solidarity activist with social movement organizers in Colombia and is fluent in Spanish, occasionally helping VAAP with interpretation and translation needs.  
Caitlin Jenness (she/her), Board Member is the Director of Finance at Evernorth and lives with her husband Miles on a small homestead in Huntington, VT. In 2013, Caitlin earned her M.B.A from Antioch University in Sustainable Business Management, and has spent the last 10 years working in financial leadership of multiple mission-driven entrepreneurial businesses across Vermont. She is excited to bring her affinity for spreadsheets, budgets and financial planning to the organizational efforts of the VAAP team.
Erin Jacobsen (she/her), Board Member is Burlington Mayor Mulvaney-Stanak's Chief of Staff. Previously she worked as Assistant Attorney General at the Office of the Vermont Attorney General and Co-Director of the office’s Community Justice Division, and before that she was a Professor of Law and Director of the South Royalton Legal Clinic at Vermont Law and Graduate School. There, she served as the Senior Staff Attorney at Vermont Immigrant Assistance project, where she supervised student clinicians on humanitarian immigration cases and taught Immigration Law and Legislation & Regulation in the classroom.
Faith Orr (she/her), Board Secretary is a second-year law student at Vermont Law and Graduate School. She graduated from Concordia University in Montréal in 2015, specializing in French-to-English translation and worked as a French-to-English translator and legal assistant. Faith has experienced her own immigration challenges, and finally became a Canadian permanent resident last year. She moved back to Vermont during COVID-19 to continue her studies and help to better the lives of asylum seekers in Vermont. She plans to practice immigration law after passing the bar.
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
LinkedIn

 
Vermont Asylum Assistance Project 
P.O. Box 814, Elmwood Ave, Burlington, VT 05402
802-999-5654 ‖
info@vaapvt.org ‖ www.vaapvt.org

Copyright © 2023, Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can
update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
 






This email was sent to *|EMAIL|*
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
*|LIST:ADDRESSLINE|*

*|REWARDS|*
Read More
VAAP VAAP

April 2024

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
View this email in your browser

VAAP NEWSLETTER


APRIL 2024
Facebook
Website
Instagram
LinkedIn
Email

UPDATES FROM OUR TEAM

Greetings, friends of VAAP! April brought us lots of exciting developments, in keeping with the transition to spring. On the education front, we hosted our first virtual attorney case rounds, during which six pro bono humanitarian immigration attorneys gathered to workshop case strategy and share learning.
 
We also advanced planning for Vermont's first-ever statewide asylum public education forum on June 14th, to which you are all cordially invited! More on that below!

On the staffing front, we learned we will be honored as Vermont's first-ever host of the Immigrant Justice Corps Fellowship, with our first attorney-fellow joining us full-time in September 2024. We also recruited our first Paralegal Advocate/Program Coordinator who will pursue Board of Immigration Appeals Recognition & Accreditation as well as undertake the Vermont Law Office Study Program - more on that next month!

On the direct services front, we supervised our first remote legal help clinic in partnership with Community Asylum Seekers Project (CASP) and the Ethiopian Community Development Council (ECDC), assisting about a dozen humanitarian status seekers and their families to seek asylum and apply for adjustment of status. We also continued to work through our long-and-growing waitlist for asylum eligibility screenings, successfully placing asylum seekers from countries including Iran, Turkey, and Ecuador with pro bono attorneys for limited or full representation. 

Finally, on the advocacy front, we published our first Op/Ed to help diversify the voices reflecting on Vermont immigration in mainstream media. We offered expert testimony to a variety of congressional committees and executive branch leaders and committees in support of H.606, which Governor Scott is expected to sign into law this month.
 
We also submitted a request for Congressionally Directed Spending to grow our Paralegal Team amidst a once-in-a-lifetime total solar eclipse?! Amazing!

Read on for more VAAP news including upcoming training opportunities, pro se assistance clinics, a partner organization feature, a fact check, and more.

FACT CHECK!

A REMINDER that all Boston Immigration Court cases in which the Respondent reports living at a Vermont-based zip code are being moved to the new Lowell Immigration Court in Chelmsford, Massachusetts. It is very likely that if you have any upcoming court date scheduled at the Boston Immigration Court, the date and location of your next hearing will be changed with very short notice. We recommend checking the Immigration Court's online system weekly while your case is in Immigration Court, by visiting https://acis.eoir.justice.gov/en/ and typing in your "A-number" (an 8 or 9 digit number listed on the top section of most immigration documents). 



We are closely monitoring reports from Lowell being shared among the American Immigration Lawyers Association's New England Chapter and the Northern New England Practitioners' Group. So far, the Lowell Immigration Judges sound thorough and relatively fair, and the return dates sound much sooner than what Judges were offering in Boston (including same-year next hearing dates for Respondents who request them). Keep an eye on Syracuse University's Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) for Lowell Immigration Court stats and individual Immigration Judges' grant and denial rates. We're supervising a pro bono attorney for all our first Lowell-based Master Calendar Hearing this week; we'll keep you updated!

PARTNER SPOTLIGHT

                                   

Connecting Cultures/New England Survivors of Torture and Trauma (NESTT)
 are two names for the same incredible program, of which VAAP is lucky to be a part. Connecting Cultures is an interdisciplinary partnership of psychological, social worker, case management, legal, medical, physical therapy, and other providers who collaborate to provide survivors of "torture," as defined by the TVPA, with holistic, integrated, and effective services in a culturally relevant and client-centered context. VAAP's Executive Director, Jill Martin Diaz, is fortunate to direct the legal wing of the Connecting Cultures partnership, which streamlines VAAP clients' access to forensic psychological and medical evaluations, human services and medical care, counselling, and more. Connecting Cultures is supported by funding from the Federal Office of Refugee Resettlement, which constitutes a large proportion of funding at VAAP. We are all in the process of updating our websites, so please reach out to us with any questions or to get connected to other partners in the Connecting Cultures consortium. 


 

PRO BONO TRAINING

Earn CLEs with us at the Vermont Bar Association in May!

The Vermont Bar Association (VBA) is hosting VAAP for two immigration 101 trainings this month: one overviewing the origins, structure, and practice of immigration law in a nutshell, and the other overviewing exciting immigration-related legal developments happening locally in Vermont. Yes, these trainings are paywalled, BUT participating means CLE credit and supporting our wonderful Bar



Share learning at a groundbreaking interdisciplinary forum in June!

You and your organizations are warmly invited to an English-language multidisciplinary symposium covering the ins and outs of welcoming recently arrived immigrants to Vermont. People classed as "refugees" are eligible for government-sponsored resettlement supports—but what about people who are seeking asylum to become a "refugee," who comprise the majority of individuals facing immigration removal proceedings today? This interactive, practical symposium on June 14 will cover the law, practice, and experience of asylum-seeking in Vermont.
 
Confirmed presenters include Association of Africans Living in Vermont (AALV); U.S. Committee on Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI); the Center for Justice Reform Clinic (CRJC); Vermont Language Justice Project (VLJP); Vermont Legal Aid (VLA); Vermont Afghan Alliance (VAA); Connecting Cultures; the Vermont State Refugee Office (SRO); Vermont Asylum Assistance Project (VAAP); and beyond! 
 
In-person attendance is limited, so register ASAP to secure your spot. Thanks to our generous sponsors, registration is FREE, lunch and refreshments will be served, and Continuing Legal Education (CLE) credit is pending. If you can't join us in person, we will stream online and also record for those who RSVP.  Co-sponsored by the Vermont Asylum Seeker Network, Vermont Afghan Alliance, Vermont Law and Graduate School's Vermont Poverty Law Fellow, and Vermont Asylum Assistance Project.




Complete our online training!

In Fall 2023, the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project partnered with Vecina, a Texas-based nonprofit founded with the mission to “empower immigrant justice advocates through mentoring attorneys, educating communities, and mobilizing volunteers.”  We are excited to share that Vecina has designed two online training modules that are available to VAAP pro bono attorneys. The first module is an overview of affirmative asylum and the second trains attorneys to conduct in-depth asylum client intakes. We are so grateful to Vecina for these resources and look forward to sharing them with pro bono attorneys who are interested in volunteering with us.  Please email us for details on how to access these trainings.

Facebook
Website
Instagram
LinkedIn
Email

GET INVOLVED

Updated Pro Bono FAQs and Pro Se Asylum Clinics
If you are interested in volunteering your time by providing an asylum seeker with free legal help, but you're not quite sure where to start, check out these Frequently Asked Questions which we'll keep updated on a rolling basis. Next, take a look at our public-facing online resources and then email us for access to our pro bono email list and insiders-only Resource SharePoint.



Not ready to take a case for full representation without some practice experience under your belt? Start by volunteering as an attorney-for-a-day at one of our upcoming pro se assistance clinics. The next one is June 13th at the Vermont Law and Graduate School's Burlington Office. We'll be training and supervising pro bono attorneys to assist pro se asylum seekers with with applications on USCIS Form I-589. We'll handle intake and language access, you just RSVP! Refreshments will be served!

Donate to VAAP

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!

- THE VAAP TEAM

MEET OUR TEAM
Jill Martin Diaz (they/them), Executive Director is VAAP's supervising attorney and first full-time paid staff. They come to VAAP from Vermont Law and Graduate School where they taught doctrinal and clinical immigration law and directed the Center for Justice Reform Clinic. Previously, Jill practiced as a Vermont Poverty Law Fellow at Vermont Legal Aid and an Immigrant Justice Corps Fellow at Sanctuary for Families New York. The National LGBTQ+ Bar Association recognized Jill’s achievements by honoring them as one of 2023’s Top 40 Lawyers Under 40. They speak English and Spanish and are licensed to practice in New York, Vermont, and the District of Vermont.
Erin Jacobsen (she/her), Board Member is Burlington Mayor Mulvaney-Stanak's Chief of Staff. Previously she worked as Assistant Attorney General at the Office of the Vermont Attorney General and Co-Director of the office’s Community Justice Division, and before that she was a Professor of Law and Director of the South Royalton Legal Clinic at Vermont Law and Graduate School. There, she served as the Senior Staff Attorney at Vermont Immigrant Assistance project, where she supervised student clinicians on humanitarian immigration cases and taught Immigration Law and Legislation & Regulation in the classroom.
Caitlin Jenness (she/her), Board Member is the Director of Finance at Evernorth and lives with her husband Miles on a small homestead in Huntington, VT. In 2013, Caitlin earned her M.B.A from Antioch University in Sustainable Business Management, and has spent the last 10 years working in financial leadership of multiple mission-driven entrepreneurial businesses across Vermont. She is excited to bring her affinity for spreadsheets, budgets and financial planning to the organizational efforts of the VAAP team.
Faith Orr (she/her), Board Secretary is a second-year law student at Vermont Law and Graduate School. She graduated from Concordia University in Montréal in 2015, specializing in French-to-English translation and worked as a French-to-English translator and legal assistant. Faith has experienced her own immigration challenges, and finally became a Canadian permanent resident last year. She moved back to Vermont during COVID-19 to continue her studies and help to better the lives of asylum seekers in Vermont. She plans to practice immigration law after passing the bar.
Kate Paarlberg-Kvam (she/they), Board Member is the Executive Director of the Milk With Dignity Standards Council. She has a PhD in Latin American Studies, and spent ten years teaching college prior to directing the Community Asylum Seekers Project (CASP) in Brattleboro, VT. In that role Kate learned firsthand the transformative power of legal representation for asylum seekers, and worked with CASP to co-found the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project with Rebecca Wasserman. Kate now directs the Milk with Dignity Standards Council, a Burlington-based nonprofit working to ensure the human rights of Vermont's dairy workers. Kate has worked as a researcher and a solidarity activist with social movement organizers in Colombia and is fluent in Spanish, occasionally helping VAAP with interpretation and translation needs.  
Becky Wasserman (she/her), Board Member is an attorney and the Executive Director of the VT Saves Program in the Office of the State Treasurer. Becky started working with asylum seekers more than ten years ago through her law school’s immigration clinic. Since then she has worked in a pro bono capacity on a number of immigration matters, including volunteering at the southern border in 2018 and 2019. In 2021, she co-founded the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, with Kate Paarlberg-Kvam. 
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
LinkedIn

 
Vermont Asylum Assistance Project 
P.O. Box 814, Elmwood Ave, Burlington, VT 05402
802-999-5654 ‖
info@vaapvt.org ‖ www.vaapvt.org

Copyright © 2023, Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can
update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
 






This email was sent to *|EMAIL|*
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
*|LIST:ADDRESSLINE|*

*|REWARDS|*
Read More
VAAP VAAP

March 2024

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
View this email in your browser

VAAP NEWSLETTER


MARCH 2024
Facebook
Website
Instagram
LinkedIn
Email

UPDATES FROM OUR TEAM

Greetings, friends of VAAP! Lots to highlight from March. On the local front, March saw VAAP placing newly screened cases, recording ethics training, and celebrating our award-winning pro bono attorneys. On the national front, March brought VAAP to Washington for the American Immigration Lawyers Association's National Day of Action. Meanwhile, the Department of Justice officially re-venued all Vermont respondents' removal proceedings to its new Lowell Immigration Court (actually located in Chelmsford, MA). Read on for details!


The Vermont Poverty Law Fellow, the Prisoners' Rights Office, and the Central Vermont Refugee Action Network (CVRAN) joined VAAP in congratulating VAAP volunteer attorney Seth Lipschutz for receiving the Vermont Bar Association’s distinguished 2024 Pro Bono Service Award. The Award recognizes the “extraordinary legal services” Attorney Lipschutz has provided to indigent asylum seekers in our community since retiring from his storied career at the Vermont Prisoners’ Rights Office in 2019. We thank Seth for his ongoing service! If you are planning for retirement and want to learn more about volunteering with VAAP as a Pro Bono Emeritus Attorney, get in touch today!


The Vermont Poverty Law Fellow also joined VAAP as Vermont Delegates at American Immigration Lawyers Association's National Day of Action in Washington. While there, the offices of Representative Balint, Senator Sanders, and Senator Welch solicited case stories from us that illustrated how national immigration issues are impacting noncitizens back home in Vermont. We offered them local context for the ways AILA's proposal for comprehensive legislative fixes would make Vermont a safer and more equitable place for noncitizens to live, work, and raise their families. 

Our bottom line was that responding to immigration legal needs at the borders alone will not make our broken immigration system function better or more fairly or justly; to fix the system, we need Congress to legislate solutions to pre-existing, less sensationalized immigration reform needs in the interior including by increasing pathways to status, appropriately resourcing the agencies that process applications, and defunding agencies amounting to the largest armed law enforcement agency in the world. See what partners at the Capital Area Immigrants' Rights (CAIR) Coalition have to say about it, and make your voice heard here: https://www.aila.org/advocacy-tools/aila-s-advocacy-action-center



In regional news, the Department of Justice issued notice that noncitizen respondents with a Vermont zip code noted in their removal proceedings before an Immigration Judge will now have their cases heard at the new Lowell Immigration Court in Chelmsford, MA. This means respondents with next hearings scheduled in Boston Immigration Court should expect those hearings to be cancelled and rescheduled at Lowell to some future date. This could mean that cases are going to be heard sooner or later than what was expected for their next hearing date in Boston. We are monitoring updates from AILA New England Chapter colleagues and will share guidance with pro bono attorneys on request and via VAAP's Resource SharePoint (to which active attorneys have access) as we learn more. 

Meanwhile, we recommend attorneys also monitor Political Asylum/Immigration Project (PAIR) updates and Immigrant Legal Advocacy Project (ILAP) Maine's updates for the latest. If you are concerned about how the move to Lowell Immigration Court will impact an asylum seeker you are assisting, contact VAAP for guidanceIf you or someone you know might be impacted by this change, you can check your court date and location online here https://acis.eoir.justice.gov/en/ by typing in your A-number (which is an 8 or 9 digit number on most immigration documents).

PRO BONO TRAINING

Save the date!
VAAP has partnered with the Vermont Poverty Law Fellow the Vermont and New Hampshire Asylum Seeker Network to deliver an Asylum Seeker Symposium at Vermont Law and Graduate School on June 14th. We would love to have you join us for this interdisciplinary public education event in person in South Royalton or online at vermontlaw.edu/live. More soon!



Complete our online training!

VAAP has partnered with Vecina, a Texas-based nonprofit working to “empower immigrant justice advocates through mentoring attorneys, educating communities, and mobilizing volunteers.”  We are excited to share that Vecina has designed two online training modules that are available to VAAP pro bono attorneys via the VAAP Resource SharePoint to which actively engaged attorney have access. The first module is an overview of affirmative asylum and the second trains attorneys on how to conduct in-depth asylum client intakes

VAAP was also welcomed to join our local partners at the U.S. Committee on Refugees and Immigrants Vermont (USCRI) at a well-attended Ethics for Immigration Lawyers workshop presented by Vermont Judiciary Bar Counsel, Michael Kennedy. Thanks to USCRI for organizing and inviting participation from our pro bono attorneys with active asylum cases, and thanks to Attorney Kennedy for supporting their work. 

We are so grateful to our partners for these resources and look forward to sharing them with pro bono attorneys who are interested in volunteering with us. Please email us for details on how to access these trainings and the SharePoint.

Stay tuned for VAAP's training calendar coming soon and be sure to subscribe to the Vermont Bar Association's newsletter for early access to the live Continuing Legal Education (CLE) training sessions VAAP will be offering later this year!

GET INVOLVED

Facebook
Website
Instagram
LinkedIn
Email

Volunteer Opportunities
We continue to actively match new pro bono attorneys with experienced mentors to work on asylum cases with clients in need of legal assistance, including individuals and families from Afghanistan.  Please email if you or your firm would like more information about that process!

Seeking Board Members
VAAP is looking for dynamic board members to help us grow our organization.  We seek individuals who are committed to our mission and encourage members of the communities we serve to apply. Special consideration will be given to anyone with lived immigration experience as well as those with an interest or experience in fundraising, public relations, legal, or financial backgrounds. Please contact us to learn more.

Financial Contributions
VAAP is building a budget that will help us support pro bono asylum legal work across Vermont. If you would like to support this growing project, please donate here.

Donate to VAAP

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!

- THE VAAP TEAM

MEET OUR TEAM
Jill Martin Diaz (they/them), Executive Director is VAAP's supervising attorney and first full-time paid staff. They come to VAAP from Vermont Law and Graduate School where they taught doctrinal and clinical immigration law and directed the Center for Justice Reform Clinic. Previously, Jill practiced as a Vermont Poverty Law Fellow at Vermont Legal Aid and an Immigrant Justice Corps Fellow at Sanctuary for Families New York. The National LGBTQ+ Bar Association recognized Jill’s achievements by honoring them as one of 2023’s Top 40 Lawyers Under 40. They are licensed to practice in New York, Vermont, and the District of Vermont.
Erin Jacobsen (she/her), Board Member is Chief of Staff of Burlington Mayor Mulvaney-Stanak. She was most recently an Assistant Attorney General at the Office of the Vermont Attorney General and Co-Director of the office’s Community Justice Division, which seeks to improve equity, public safety, and fairness in all aspects of the criminal legal system. Previously, she was a Professor of Law and Director of the South Royalton Legal Clinic at Vermont Law and Graduate School, where she supervised student clinicians on humanitarian immigration cases and taught Immigration Law and Legislation & Regulation in the classroom.
Caitlin Jenness (she/her), Board Member lives with her husband Miles on a small homestead in Huntington, VT. In 2013, Caitlin earned her M.B.A from Antioch University in Sustainable Business Management, and has spent the last 10 years working in financial leadership of multiple mission-driven entrepreneurial businesses across Vermont. She is excited to bring her affinity for spreadsheets, budgets and financial planning to the organizational efforts of the VAAP team.
Faith Orr (she/her), Board Member is a first-year law student at Vermont Law and Graduate School. She graduated from Concordia University in Montréal in 2015, specializing in French-to-English translation and worked as a French-to-English translator and legal assistant. Faith has experienced her own immigration challenges, and finally became a Canadian permanent resident last year. She moved back to Vermont during COVID-19 to continue her studies and help to better the lives of asylum seekers in Vermont. She plans to practice immigration law after passing the bar.
Kate Paarlberg-Kvam (she/they), Board Member has a PhD in Latin American Studies, and spent ten years teaching college prior to directing the Community Asylum Seekers Project (CASP) in Brattleboro. In that role Kate learned firsthand the transformative power of legal representation for asylum seekers, and worked with CASP to co-found the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project with Rebecca Wasserman. Kate now directs the Milk with Dignity Standards Council, a Burlington-based nonprofit working to ensure the human rights of Vermont's dairy workers. Kate has worked as a researcher and a solidarity activist with social movement organizers in Colombia and is fluent in Spanish, occasionally helping VAAP with interpretation and translation needs.  
Becky Wasserman (she/her), Board Member is an attorney and the Executive Director of the VT Saves Program in the Office of the State Treasurer. Becky started working with asylum seekers more than ten years ago through her law school’s immigration clinic. Since then she has worked in a pro bono capacity on a number of immigration matters, including volunteering at the southern border in 2018 and 2019. In 2021, she co-founded the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project with Kate Paarlberg-Kvam and a group of immigration attorneys and advocates from around the state. 
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
LinkedIn

 
Vermont Asylum Assistance Project 
P.O. Box 814, Elmwood Ave, Burlington, VT 05402
802-999-5654 ‖
info@vaapvt.org ‖ www.vaapvt.org

Copyright © 2023, Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can
update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
 






This email was sent to *|EMAIL|*
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
*|LIST:ADDRESSLINE|*

*|REWARDS|*
Read More
VAAP VAAP

January/February 2024

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
View this email in your browser

VAAP NEWSLETTER


JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2024
Facebook
Website
Instagram
LinkedIn
Email

UPDATES FROM OUR TEAM

This winter, VAAP celebrated the arrival of our first full-time staff member in Attorney Jill Martin Diaz. After settling into Vermont Green Offices, a sustainable coworking space in Burlington's Old North End, they hit the ground running fulfilling their duties as Executive Director. Jill completed intakes for asylum seekers from countries including Brazil, China, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Iran, and Mexico; mentored new and existing volunteer attorneys representing asylum seekers pro bono; coordinated with partners statewide to develop VAAP programming for 2024; developed infrastructure for professional case supervision and online resource management; fundraised to support VAAP's sustainable growth; and more. 
 
READ ON for additional news and trainings opportunities!

On February 1, Jill also spoke with WCAX about the impact of improving access to immigration counsel and the variety of ways folks can contact VAAP to request or offer asylum legal help. Watch the clip here:



Thanks to an invitation from the Association of Africans Living in Vermont (AALV), Jill also participated in a liaison meeting with leaders of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Office of the Principal Legal Advisor (OPLA) and the Enforcement and Removals Office (ERO). What we learned is that, now more than ever, noncitizens’ access to counsel in removal proceedings will mean the difference between which asylum seekers receive a fast and fair hearing and which do not.

ICE reports actively prosecuting about 307,000 non-detained removal cases across New England. Of these, about 900 cases are for noncitizens based in Vermont, all of whom are subject to the jurisdiction of Boston Immigration Court (for now). OPLA's Boston team of 28 attorneys are prosecuting over 150,000 cases overall, up from 120k last year and 90k the year before that. It is unclear when Immigration Judges will begin hearing removal cases, including for Vermont-based respondents, at the new Lowell Immigration Court.
 
ICE reports supervising 200 dedicated beds across northern New England for noncitizens who the immigration law says ICE must detain as well as those the law says ICE may detain subject to review by an Immigration Judge. None of these beds are in Vermont, so the agencies have 72 hours to relocate a person newly detained in Vermont to an ICE facility in a nearby state. Note that if the agencies detain someone under 18 years old, they should relocate the youth to less restrictive Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) custody in a nearby state while plans are made to release the youth to a parent, guardian, or other custodian in concert with the appropriate state-level child protection agency(s).
 
ICE reports that most Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and ICE officers patrolling the Swanton Sector, which includes most of Vermont, are working up north for short term periods while detailed from other regional offices. This explains why we are seeing inconsistent application of these agencies’ own prosecutorial discretion policies by CBP and ICE officers making immigration arrests in our communities.
 
Note that this month Canada reimposed visa restrictions for Mexican nationals to curb asylum seeking in Canada and at the U.S./Canada border. VAAP is collaborating with the U.S./Canada Border Network to monitor access to justice for noncitizens caught up in the political crossfire, who continue to have an unqualified right to seek asylum in the U.S. pursuant INA § 208 and international law. We will continue to monitor reporting on northern border crossings.
 
TL;DR: As CBP and ICE (and Canada) ramp up border enforcement, we will continue to see more cases entering and then stagnating in the U.S. Immigration Court system.

 
As no-cost asylum attorneys and advocates, here’s what we can do:
 
Help noncitizens know their rights. Everyone in the U.S. has the right to assert their fear of returning to their country of origin at ANY time; to request a credible fear interview by the government; to request review by an Immigration Judge if their fear is found “not credible;” and to go through this process with an interpreter (at the government’s expense) and with an attorney (at their own expense). 
 
Promote government accountability for its own rules. Help VAAP document the manner and methods in which agencies are enforcing immigration laws in our border communities by writing info@vaapvt.org, so we can track agencies’ compliance with the U.S.-Canada Safe Third Country Agreement, Vermont Fair and Impartial Policing policies, and Vermont antidiscrimination and human rights laws, as well as international and federal immigration and due process laws.
 
Enter our appearance for an asylum seeker in removal proceedings!
Access to counsel helps asylum seekers meet confusing statutory filing deadlines, prove up complex legal standards, and accelerate toward receiving a work authorized social security number that is the key to government-issued ID, work, banking, health care, professional licensure, you name it.

As for ensuring access to a fair hearing, Asylum legal counsel also makes it exponentially more likely that an asylum seeker will ultimately prevail in their case. As for ensuring access to a fast hearing, ICE OPLA shares our interest in seeing asylum cases litigated to their finality and taken off the docket, so let’s make it easy for them! For a well papered case, ICE will join a Motion to Advance an asylum seeker’s final merits hearings and can even stipulate to some of the key elements the asylum seeker must prove to win.

These types of legal work are VAAP’s bread and butter. JOIN US!

PRO BONO TRAINING

Complete our online training!
In Fall 2023, the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project partnered with Vecina, a Texas-based nonprofit founded with the mission to “empower immigrant justice advocates through mentoring attorneys, educating communities, and mobilizing volunteers.”  We are excited to share that Vecina has designed two online training modules that are available to VAAP pro bono attorneys. The first module is an overview of affirmative asylum and the second trains attorneys to conduct in-depth asylum client intakes. We are so grateful to Vecina for these resources and look forward to sharing them with pro bono attorneys who are interested in volunteering with us.  Please email us for details on how to access these trainings.

Join us at the Vermont Bar Association's Mid-Year Meeting!
We are looking very forward to attending the VBA's spring conference on March 29 in Burlington, which offers several CLE sessions directly on point:

 

Leveraging Collective Care & Social Work Strategies to Address Workplace Trauma & Stress (1.5 MCLE wellness), 8:30am - 10:00am, Speaker: Cassie Gillespie. Attorneys and legal professionals are exposed to stress, human suffering, and secondary trauma every day at work. The impact of this exposure can be significant. Nevertheless, many people who work in the legal profession have not been supported to address workplace trauma exposure or have only been asked to address it at the individual level with self-care practices. Self-care is not solving the problems of workplace stress, trauma, and burnout. Leveraging the power of teams and professional relationships is the next frontier in tackling workplace impact. This session will explore workplace trauma exposure and how we can think differently about preventing it.
 

Take an International Tour (1.5 MCLE general), 10:30am - 12:00pm, Speakers: Kristen Connors, Molly Gray, Mark Oettinger, Maya Tsukazaki, and Nathan Virag. Got cabin fever? No passport needed. Let the VBA’s International Law & Practice Section (ILP) take you on a tour of current topics in international law. Molly Gray and Nathan Virag will describe the legal challenges facing Vermont’s immigrant population…and what they are doing to help. Spoiler alert! They’re looking for help. Then, Kristen Connors and Maya Tsukazaki will discuss the related topic of Immigration Relief for Young Vermonters. Even if you’ve never considered handling a case with cross-border characteristics, you need to be able to spot cross-border issues when they arise. And yes, there are more pro bono opportunities available. And speaking of issue spotting, the final third of the event will feature Moderator and ILP Chair Mark Oettinger addressing International Law Issue Spotting for the Vermont Practitioner, and providing a brief update on the status of Supranational Courts. We don’t see as much international law in Vermont as one might in a place like New York City or Los Angeles. That said, the world is becoming a smaller place, and some would argue that we are witnessing a convergence between common law and civil law systems. In Vermont, we share a border with a French-speaking civil law jurisdiction. Are you comfortable when a long-standing client wants to export…or import…or wants to hire a non-U.S. citizen…or can’t travel to Canada because of a DUI conviction from college. The potential fact patterns are endless. And they’re unusual…and hence fun! Join us in exploring current events in the context of international law.

US Supreme Court Update (1.0 MCLE general), 2:00pm - 3:00pm, Speaker: Rod Smolla, President, VLGS Vermont Law and Graduate School. Rod Smolla will present an update on the evolving constitutional jurisprudence of the U.S. Supreme Court, focusing principally on those areas of constitutional law that are currently undergoing major change. The topics will include discussion of the Court’s reshaping of the meaning of the Religion Clauses, the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses, separation of powers principles, and doctrines circumscribing the powers of administrative agencies. The update will include as a theme the Court’s increasing emphasis on textualism and originalism as driving approaches to constitutional interpretation.

Everything You Wanted to Know About Ethics But Were Afraid to Ask (now's your chance!) (1.5 MCLE ethics), 3:30pm - 5:00pm, Speakers: Mike Kennedy and Stuart Teicher. Okay, maybe that’s slightly overselling it. The program won’t be about absolutely everything. But it’s going to cover a lot of ground…and you’ll be able to ask questions! Join Vermont’s Bar Counsel Michael Kennedy and his guest, educator Stuart Teicher, as they take your questions on the ethics issues you’d like to talk about. Plus, they have some words of their own. We’ll be discussing the latest in artificial intelligence, issues about conflicts, and more!

GET INVOLVED

Facebook
Website
Instagram
LinkedIn
Email

Volunteer Opportunities
We continue to actively match new pro bono attorneys with experienced mentors to work on asylum cases with clients in need of legal assistance, including individuals and families from Afghanistan.  Please email if you or your firm would like more information about that process!

Seeking Board Members
VAAP is looking for dynamic board members to help us grow our organization.  We seek individuals who are committed to our mission and encourage members of the communities we serve to apply. Special consideration will be given to anyone with lived immigration experience as well as those with an interest or experience in fundraising, public relations, legal, or financial backgrounds. Please contact us to learn more.

Financial Contributions
VAAP is building a budget that will help us support pro bono asylum legal work across Vermont. If you would like to support this growing project, please donate here.

Donate to VAAP

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!

- THE VAAP TEAM

MEET OUR TEAM
Jill Martin Diaz (they/them), Executive Director is VAAP's supervising attorney and first full-time paid staff. They come to VAAP from Vermont Law and Graduate School where they taught doctrinal and clinical immigration law and directed the Center for Justice Reform Clinic. Previously, Jill practiced as a Vermont Poverty Law Fellow at Vermont Legal Aid and an Immigrant Justice Corps Fellow at Sanctuary for Families New York. The National LGBTQ+ Bar Association recognized Jill’s achievements by honoring them as one of 2023’s Top 40 Lawyers Under 40. They are licensed to practice in New York, Vermont, and the District of Vermont.
Erin Jacobsen (she/her), Board Chair is an Assistant Attorney General at the Office of the Vermont Attorney General and Co-Director of the office’s Community Justice Division, which seeks to improve equity, public safety, and fairness in all aspects of the criminal legal system. She was previously a Professor of Law and Director of the South Royalton Legal Clinic at Vermont Law and Graduate School and the Senior Staff Attorney at Vermont Immigrant Assistance project, where she supervised student clinicians on humanitarian immigration cases and taught Immigration Law and Legislation & Regulation in the classroom.
Caitlin Jenness (she/her), Board Treasurer lives with her husband Miles on a small homestead in Huntington, VT. In 2013, Caitlin earned her M.B.A from Antioch University in Sustainable Business Management, and has spent the last 10 years working in financial leadership of multiple mission-driven entrepreneurial businesses across Vermont. She is excited to bring her affinity for spreadsheets, budgets and financial planning to the organizational efforts of the VAAP team.
Faith Orr (she/her), Board Secretary is a first-year law student at Vermont Law and Graduate School. She graduated from Concordia University in Montréal in 2015, specializing in French-to-English translation and worked as a French-to-English translator and legal assistant. Faith has experienced her own immigration challenges, and finally became a Canadian permanent resident last year. She moved back to Vermont during COVID-19 to continue her studies and help to better the lives of asylum seekers in Vermont. She plans to practice immigration law after passing the bar.
Kate Paarlberg-Kvam (she/they), Board Member has a PhD in Latin American Studies, and spent ten years teaching college prior to directing the Community Asylum Seekers Project (CASP) in Brattleboro. In that role Kate learned firsthand the transformative power of legal representation for asylum seekers, and worked with CASP to co-found the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project with Rebecca Wasserman. Kate now directs the Milk with Dignity Standards Council, a Burlington-based nonprofit working to ensure the human rights of Vermont's dairy workers. Kate has worked as a researcher and a solidarity activist with social movement organizers in Colombia and is fluent in Spanish, occasionally helping VAAP with interpretation and translation needs.  
Becky Wasserman (she/her), Board Member is an attorney and the Executive Director of the VT Saves Program in the Office of the State Treasurer. Becky started working with asylum seekers more than ten years ago through her law school’s immigration clinic. Since then she has worked in a pro bono capacity on a number of immigration matters, including volunteering at the southern border in 2018 and 2019. In 2021, she co-founded the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, with Kate Paarlberg-Kvam. 
Website
Email
Facebook
Instagram
LinkedIn

 
Vermont Asylum Assistance Project 
P.O. Box 814, Elmwood Ave, Burlington, VT 05402
802-999-5654 ‖
info@vaapvt.org ‖ www.vaapvt.org

Copyright © 2023, Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can
update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
 






This email was sent to *|EMAIL|*
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
*|LIST:ADDRESSLINE|*

*|REWARDS|*
Read More
VAAP VAAP

December 2023

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
View this email in your browser

PRO BONO OPPORTUNITIES
MONTHLY NEWSLETTER


DECEMBER 2023

UPDATES FROM OUR TEAM

As we approach the New Year, we wanted to thank you for your invaluable contributions to VAAP this past year and announce some exciting changes that are coming in 2024. 

We are thrilled to announce that Jill Martin Diaz (they/them) will join VAAP in January as the organization's inaugural Executive Director.  Jill comes to VAAP with significant immigration law experience.  Most recently, Jill was a Professor of Law and Associate Director of the Center for Justice Reform, where they taught doctrinal immigration law and led the Center for Justice Reform Clinic (CJRC).  The new CJRC grew from the legacy Vermont Immigrant Assistance clinic project, Vermont's foremost immigration legal service provider and its only pro bono removal defender.  We are so excited to have Jill join the VAAP team and help us to grow Vermont's immigration legal services bar into a more diversified, accessible, and sustainable one.

Keep reading below for additional news and trainings for pro bono attorneys!

PRO BONO TRAINING

New Training Modules for Pro Bonos
In Fall 2023, the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project partnered with Vecina, a Texas-based nonprofit founded with the mission to “empower immigrant justice advocates through mentoring attorneys, educating communities, and mobilizing volunteers.”  We are excited to share that Vecina has designed two online training modules that are available to VAAP pro bono attorneys.  The first module is an overview of affirmative asylum and the second trains attorneys to conduct asylum client intakes.

We are so grateful to Vecina for these resources and look forward to sharing them with pro bono attorneys who are interested in volunteering with us.  Please email us for details on how to access these trainings.

GET INVOLVED

Volunteer Opportunities
We continue to actively match new pro bono attorneys with experienced mentors to work on asylum cases with clients in need of legal assistance.  Please email if you or your firm would like more information about that process!

Afghan Asylum Project
We have recently started matching attorneys to work on Afghan asylum cases through the Association of Africans Living in Vermont (AALV).  AALV are still in need of more pro bono attorneys to assist them with additional Afghan asylum cases.  AALV staff would be on-hand to mentor pro bono attorneys, including by answering questions and reviewing drafts.  Please email us if you are interested in assisting with one of these cases.  


Seeking Board Members!
VAAP is looking for dynamic Board members to help us grow our organization.  We seek individuals who are committed to our mission and encourage members of the communities we serve to apply.  Special consideration will be given to anyone with an interest or experience in fundraising, public relations, legal, or financial backgrounds.  Please contact us
to learn more.

Financial Contributions
VAAP is building a budget that will help us support a full-time director to fully resource pro bono asylum attorneys in the State. If you would like to support this growing project, please
donate here.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!
- THE VAAP TEAM

Donate to VAAP
MEET OUR BOARD
Erin Jacobsen (she/her), Chair of the Board is an Assistant Attorney General at the Office of the Vermont Attorney General and Co-Director of the office’s Community Justice Division, which seeks to improve equity, public safety, and fairness in all aspects of the criminal legal system. She was previously a Professor of Law and Director of the South Royalton Legal Clinic at Vermont Law and Graduate School and the Senior Staff Attorney at Vermont Immigrant Assistance project, where she supervised student clinicians on humanitarian immigration cases and taught Immigration Law and Legislation & Regulation in the classroom.
Caitlin Jenness (she/her), Treasurer lives with her husband Miles on a small homestead in Huntington, VT. In 2013, Caitlin earned her M.B.A from Antioch University in Sustainable Business Management, and has spent the last 10 years working in financial leadership of multiple mission-driven entrepreneurial businesses across Vermont. She is excited to bring her affinity for spreadsheets, budgets and financial planning to the organizational efforts of the VAAP team.
Faith Orr (she/her), Secretary is a first-year law student at Vermont Law and Graduate School. She graduated from Concordia University in Montréal in 2015, specializing in French-to-English translation and worked as a French-to-English translator and legal assistant. Faith has experienced her own immigration challenges, and finally became a Canadian permanent resident last year. She moved back to Vermont during COVID-19 to continue her studies and help to better the lives of asylum seekers in Vermont. She plans to practice immigration law after passing the bar.
Kate Paarlberg-Kvam (she/they) has a PhD in Latin American Studies, and spent ten years teaching college prior to directing the Community Asylum Seekers Project (CASP) in Brattleboro. In that role Kate learned firsthand the transformative power of legal representation for asylum seekers, and worked with CASP to co-found the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project with Rebecca Wasserman. Kate now directs the Milk with Dignity Standards Council, a Burlington-based nonprofit working to ensure the human rights of Vermont's dairy workers. Kate has worked as a researcher and a solidarity activist with social movement organizers in Colombia and is fluent in Spanish, occasionally helping VAAP with interpretation and translation needs.  
Becky Wasserman (she/her) (Co-Founder) Becky is an attorney and the Executive Director of the VT Saves Program in the Office of the State Treasurer. Becky started working with asylum seekers more than ten years ago through her law school’s immigration clinic. Since then she has worked in a pro bono capacity on a number of immigration matters, including volunteering at the southern border in 2018 and 2019. In 2021, she co-founded the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, with Kate Paarlberg-Kvam. 
Website
Our mailing address is:
50 Lakeside Avenue,
Unit 118-H25
Burlington, VT 05401

Copyright © 2023, Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
 






This email was sent to *|EMAIL|*
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
*|LIST:ADDRESSLINE|*

*|REWARDS|*
Read More
VAAP VAAP

November 2023

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
View this email in your browser

PRO BONO OPPORTUNITIES
MONTHLY NEWSLETTER


NOVEMBER 2023

UPDATES FROM OUR TEAM

During this Thanksgiving holiday, we wanted to take a moment to thank all of our volunteers and donors whose generous time and support make it possible for us to help asylum seekers in Vermont.  We are grateful for your support!

Keep reading below for additional news and trainings for pro bono attorneys!

PRO BONO NEWS

USCIS Reverts to 180-Day Automatic Extensions of Employment 
On October 27th, USCIS announced it will end its temporary 540-day automatic extension period for filing certain employment authorization documents.  In May 2022, USCIS implemented by temporary rule an increase in the automatic extension period from 180 days to up to 540 days for certain renewal applicants.  This temporary rule was in effect until October 26, 2023.  Beginning October 27, 2023, automatic extensions based on timely filed applications to renew employment authorization and/or employment authorization documents are subject to the original 180-day period for eligible applicants.  USCIS will not apply this change retroactively and will honor all prior automatic extensions of up to 540 days.  More information about this change can be found here.  

GET INVOLVED

Volunteer Opportunities
We continue to actively match new pro bono attorneys with experienced mentors to work on asylum cases with clients in need of legal assistance.  Please email if you or your firm would like more information about that process!

Afghan Asylum Project
We have recently started matching attorneys to work on Afghan asylum cases through the Association of Africans Living in Vermont (AALV).  AALV are still in need of more pro bono attorneys to assist them with additional Afghan asylum cases.  AALV staff would be on-hand to mentor pro bono attorneys, including by answering questions and reviewing drafts.  Please email us if you are interested in assisting with one of these cases.  


Seeking Board Members!
VAAP is looking for dynamic Board members to help us grow our organization.  We seek individuals who are committed to our mission and encourage members of the communities we serve to apply.  Special consideration will be given to anyone with an interest or experience in fundraising, public relations, legal, or financial backgrounds.  Please contact us
to learn more.

Financial Contributions
VAAP is building a budget that will help us support a full-time director to fully resource pro bono asylum attorneys in the State. If you would like to support this growing project, please
donate here.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!
- THE VAAP TEAM

Donate to VAAP
MEET OUR BOARD
Erin Jacobsen (she/her), Chair of the Board is an Assistant Attorney General at the Office of the Vermont Attorney General and Co-Director of the office’s Community Justice Division, which seeks to improve equity, public safety, and fairness in all aspects of the criminal legal system. She was previously a Professor of Law and Director of the South Royalton Legal Clinic at Vermont Law and Graduate School and the Senior Staff Attorney at Vermont Immigrant Assistance project, where she supervised student clinicians on humanitarian immigration cases and taught Immigration Law and Legislation & Regulation in the classroom.
Caitlin Jenness (she/her), Treasurer lives with her husband Miles on a small homestead in Huntington, VT. In 2013, Caitlin earned her M.B.A from Antioch University in Sustainable Business Management, and has spent the last 10 years working in financial leadership of multiple mission-driven entrepreneurial businesses across Vermont. She is excited to bring her affinity for spreadsheets, budgets and financial planning to the organizational efforts of the VAAP team.
Faith Orr (she/her), Secretary is a first-year law student at Vermont Law and Graduate School. She graduated from Concordia University in Montréal in 2015, specializing in French-to-English translation and worked as a French-to-English translator and legal assistant. Faith has experienced her own immigration challenges, and finally became a Canadian permanent resident last year. She moved back to Vermont during COVID-19 to continue her studies and help to better the lives of asylum seekers in Vermont. She plans to practice immigration law after passing the bar.
Kate Paarlberg-Kvam (she/they) has a PhD in Latin American Studies, and spent ten years teaching college prior to directing the Community Asylum Seekers Project (CASP) in Brattleboro. In that role Kate learned firsthand the transformative power of legal representation for asylum seekers, and worked with CASP to co-found the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project with Rebecca Wasserman. Kate now directs the Milk with Dignity Standards Council, a Burlington-based nonprofit working to ensure the human rights of Vermont's dairy workers. Kate has worked as a researcher and a solidarity activist with social movement organizers in Colombia and is fluent in Spanish, occasionally helping VAAP with interpretation and translation needs.  
Website
Our mailing address is:
50 Lakeside Avenue,
Unit 118-H25
Burlington, VT 05401

Copyright © 2023, Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
 






This email was sent to *|EMAIL|*
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
*|LIST:ADDRESSLINE|*

*|REWARDS|*
Read More
VAAP VAAP

October 2023

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
View this email in your browser

PRO BONO OPPORTUNITIES
MONTHLY NEWSLETTER


OCTOBER 2023

UPDATES FROM OUR TEAM

Last week was National Pro Bono Week, which is an opportunity to highlight the increasing need of pro bono services nationally and celebrate the lawyers, paralegals, and law students around the country who volunteer their time to provide legal services to those who cannot afford a lawyer. 

VAAP is only able to provide pro bono services to asylum seekers in Vermont because of the many attorneys and legal professionals who volunteer their time with us.  We recognize and thank all of our pro bono attorneys for the immense impact they are making in the lives of asylum seekers in Vermont.

Keep reading below for additional news and trainings for pro bono attorneys!

PRO BONO NEWS

Updates to USCIS Change of Address Tool
On October 12th, USCIS announced the launch of a new Enterprise Change of Address (E-COA) self-service tool.  This tool allows applicants with pending applications, petitions, or requests to update their address with USCIS more easily and allows USCIS to more efficiently process these changes. To use the E-COA tool, the applicant must change their address through the online USCIS portal. More information about this change can be found here.  

GET INVOLVED

Volunteer Opportunities
We continue to actively match new pro bono attorneys with experienced mentors to work on asylum cases with clients in need of legal assistance.  Please email if you or your firm would like more information about that process!

Afghan Asylum Project
We have recently matched two attorneys to work on Afghan asylum cases through the Association of Africans Living in Vermont (AALV).  AALV are still in need of more pro bono attorneys to assist them with additional Afghan asylum cases.  AALV staff would be on-hand to mentor pro bono attorneys, including by answering questions and reviewing drafts.  Please email us if you are interested in assisting with one of these cases.  


Seeking Board Members!
VAAP is looking for dynamic Board members to help us grow our organization.  We seek individuals who are committed to our mission and encourage members of the communities we serve to apply.  Special consideration will be given to anyone with an interest or experience in fundraising, public relations, legal, or financial backgrounds.  Please contact us
to learn more.

Financial Contributions
VAAP is building a budget that will help us support a full-time director to fully resource pro bono asylum attorneys in the State. If you would like to support this growing project, please
donate here.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!
- THE VAAP TEAM

Donate to VAAP
MEET OUR BOARD
Erin Jacobsen (she/her), Chair of the Board is an Assistant Attorney General at the Office of the Vermont Attorney General and Co-Director of the office’s Community Justice Division, which seeks to improve equity, public safety, and fairness in all aspects of the criminal legal system. She was previously a Professor of Law and Director of the South Royalton Legal Clinic at Vermont Law and Graduate School and the Senior Staff Attorney at Vermont Immigrant Assistance project, where she supervised student clinicians on humanitarian immigration cases and taught Immigration Law and Legislation & Regulation in the classroom.
Caitlin Jenness (she/her), Treasurer lives with her husband Miles on a small homestead in Huntington, VT. In 2013, Caitlin earned her M.B.A from Antioch University in Sustainable Business Management, and has spent the last 10 years working in financial leadership of multiple mission-driven entrepreneurial businesses across Vermont. She is excited to bring her affinity for spreadsheets, budgets and financial planning to the organizational efforts of the VAAP team.
Faith Orr (she/her), Secretary is a first-year law student at Vermont Law and Graduate School. She graduated from Concordia University in Montréal in 2015, specializing in French-to-English translation and worked as a French-to-English translator and legal assistant. Faith has experienced her own immigration challenges, and finally became a Canadian permanent resident last year. She moved back to Vermont during COVID-19 to continue her studies and help to better the lives of asylum seekers in Vermont. She plans to practice immigration law after passing the bar.
Kate Paarlberg-Kvam (she/they) has a PhD in Latin American Studies, and spent ten years teaching college prior to directing the Community Asylum Seekers Project (CASP) in Brattleboro. In that role Kate learned firsthand the transformative power of legal representation for asylum seekers, and worked with CASP to co-found the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project with Rebecca Wasserman. Kate now directs the Milk with Dignity Standards Council, a Burlington-based nonprofit working to ensure the human rights of Vermont's dairy workers. Kate has worked as a researcher and a solidarity activist with social movement organizers in Colombia and is fluent in Spanish, occasionally helping VAAP with interpretation and translation needs.  
Website
Our mailing address is:
50 Lakeside Avenue,
Unit 118-H25
Burlington, VT 05401

Copyright © 2023, Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
 






This email was sent to *|EMAIL|*
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
*|LIST:ADDRESSLINE|*

*|REWARDS|*
Read More
VAAP VAAP

September 2023

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
View this email in your browser

PRO BONO OPPORTUNITIES
MONTHLY NEWSLETTER


August 2023

UPDATES FROM OUR TEAM

Happy fall! 

We hope you have had a chance to check out our new website, where you can learn more about our work, ways to volunteer, and legal resources on asylum. 

Keep reading below for additional news and trainings for pro bono attorneys.

PRO BONO NEWS AND TRAININGS

Updates to Employment Authorization Document Renewal Periods
Last week, USCIS announced that several changes will be made to the Employment Authorization Document (EAD) process that will expedite processing times and alleviate the need for applicants to frequently apply for renewals.  Beginning October 1, 2023, certain applicants will be issued EADs for five-year periods instead of the current two-year period. This change is in effect for asylees, refugees, asylum seekers, receipts of withholding of removal, adjustment of status applicants, and individuals who received a cancellation of removal.  Also starting on that date, USCIS will begin expediting EAD applications for individuals paroled in after scheduling an appointment with the CBP One application.  You can read more about these changes
here.

Upcoming Trainings

The Catholic Legal Immigration Network, Inc. (CLINIC) is holding a two-part webinar series on representing asylees and refugees.  You can find out more and register for the event here

GET INVOLVED

Volunteer Opportunities
We continue to actively match new pro bono attorneys with experienced mentors to work on asylum cases with clients in need of legal assistance.  Please email if you or your firm would like more information about that process!

Afghan Asylum Project
We are seeking pro bono attorneys to assist the Association of Africans Living in Vermont (AALV) with Afghan asylum cases.   AALV staff would be on-hand to mentor pro bono attorneys, including by answering questions and reviewing drafts.  Please email us if you are interested in assisting with one of these cases.  


Seeking Board Members!
VAAP is looking for dynamic Board members to help us grow our organization.  We seek individuals who are committed to our mission and encourage members of the communities we serve to apply.  Special consideration will be given to those to anyone with an interest or experience in fundraising, public relations, legal, or financial backgrounds.  Please contact us
to learn more.

Financial Contributions
VAAP is building a budget that would help us support a full-time director to fully resource pro bono asylum attorneys in the State. If you would like to support this growing project, please
donate here.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!
- THE VAAP TEAM

Donate to VAAP
MEET OUR BOARD
Erin Jacobsen (she/her), Chair of the Board is an Assistant Attorney General at the Office of the Vermont Attorney General and Co-Director of the office’s Community Justice Division, which seeks to improve equity, public safety, and fairness in all aspects of the criminal legal system. She was previously a Professor of Law and Director of the South Royalton Legal Clinic at Vermont Law and Graduate School and the Senior Staff Attorney at Vermont Immigrant Assistance project, where she supervised student clinicians on humanitarian immigration cases and taught Immigration Law and Legislation & Regulation in the classroom.
Caitlin Jenness (she/her), Treasurer lives with her husband Miles on a small homestead in Huntington, VT. In 2013, Caitlin earned her M.B.A from Antioch University in Sustainable Business Management, and has spent the last 10 years working in financial leadership of multiple mission-driven entrepreneurial businesses across Vermont. She is excited to bring her affinity for spreadsheets, budgets and financial planning to the organizational efforts of the VAAP team.
Faith Orr (she/her), Secretary is a first-year law student at Vermont Law and Graduate School. She graduated from Concordia University in Montréal in 2015, specializing in French-to-English translation and worked as a French-to-English translator and legal assistant. Faith has experienced her own immigration challenges, and finally became a Canadian permanent resident last year. She moved back to Vermont during COVID-19 to continue her studies and help to better the lives of asylum seekers in Vermont. She plans to practice immigration law after passing the bar.
Kate Paarlberg-Kvam (she/they) has a PhD in Latin American Studies, and spent ten years teaching college prior to directing the Community Asylum Seekers Project (CASP) in Brattleboro. In that role Kate learned firsthand the transformative power of legal representation for asylum seekers, and worked with CASP to co-found the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project with Rebecca Wasserman. Kate now directs the Milk with Dignity Standards Council, a Burlington-based nonprofit working to ensure the human rights of Vermont's dairy workers. Kate has worked as a researcher and a solidarity activist with social movement organizers in Colombia and is fluent in Spanish, occasionally helping VAAP with interpretation and translation needs.  
Website
Our mailing address is:
50 Lakeside Avenue,
Unit 118-H25
Burlington, VT 05401

Copyright © 2023, Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
 






This email was sent to *|EMAIL|*
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
*|LIST:ADDRESSLINE|*

*|REWARDS|*
Read More
VAAP VAAP

August 2023

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
View this email in your browser

PRO BONO OPPORTUNITIES
MONTHLY NEWSLETTER


August 2023

UPDATES FROM OUR TEAM

Dear all:

We hope you are enjoying the last few weeks of summer!

We are excited to announce that we recently launched a new website.  Please visit the site to learn more about our work, ways to volunteer, and legal resources on asylum.

See below for additional pro bono news and updates on available cases for attorneys.

 

PRO BONO NEWS

USCIS Online Request System
On August 21st, USCIS launched a new online appointment request page.  This website can be used by both individuals and attorneys to schedule an in-person appointment with USCIS online instead of calling a USCIS Contact Center.  You can request an online appointment here.  

 

GET INVOLVED

Volunteer Opportunities
We continue to actively match new pro bono attorneys with experienced mentors to work on asylum cases with clients in need of legal assistance.  Please email info@vaapvt.org if you or your firm would like more information about that process!

Afghan Asylum Project
We are seeking pro bono attorneys to assist the Association of Africans Living in Vermont (AALV) with two Afghan asylum cases.  Attorneys at AALV have already started preparing these cases and it is anticipated that each case will require approximately 20 hours of work.  AALV staff would be on-hand to mentor pro bono attorneys, including by answering questions and reviewing drafts.  Please email us if you are interested in assisting with one of these cases.  


Seeking Board Members!
VAAP is looking for dynamic Board members to help us grow our organization.  We seek individuals who are committed to our mission and encourage members of the communities we serve to apply.  Special consideration will be given to those to anyone with an interest or experience in fundraising, public relations, legal, or financial backgrounds.  Please contact us at
info@vaapvt.org to learn more.

Financial Contributions
VAAP is building a budget that would help us support a full-time director to fully resource pro bono asylum attorneys in the State. If you would like to support this growing project, please
donate here.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!
- THE VAAP TEAM

Donate to VAAP
Erin Jacobsen (she/her), Chair of the Board is an Assistant Attorney General at the Office of the Vermont Attorney General and Co-Director of the office’s Community Justice Division, which seeks to improve equity, public safety, and fairness in all aspects of the criminal legal system. She was previously a Professor of Law and Director of the South Royalton Legal Clinic at Vermont Law and Graduate School and the Senior Staff Attorney at Vermont Immigrant Assistance project, where she supervised student clinicians on humanitarian immigration cases and taught Immigration Law and Legislation & Regulation in the classroom.
Caitlin Jenness (she/her), Treasurer lives with her husband Miles on a small homestead in Huntington, VT. In 2013, Caitlin earned her M.B.A from Antioch University in Sustainable Business Management, and has spent the last 10 years working in financial leadership of multiple mission-driven entrepreneurial businesses across Vermont. She is excited to bring her affinity for spreadsheets, budgets and financial planning to the organizational efforts of the VAAP team.
Faith Orr (she/her), Secretary is a first-year law student at Vermont Law and Graduate School. She graduated from Concordia University in Montréal in 2015, specializing in French-to-English translation and worked as a French-to-English translator and legal assistant. Faith has experienced her own immigration challenges, and finally became a Canadian permanent resident last year. She moved back to Vermont during COVID-19 to continue her studies and help to better the lives of asylum seekers in Vermont. She plans to practice immigration law after passing the bar.
Kate Paarlberg-Kvam (she/they) has a PhD in Latin American Studies, and spent ten years teaching college prior to directing the Community Asylum Seekers Project (CASP) in Brattleboro. In that role Kate learned firsthand the transformative power of legal representation for asylum seekers, and worked with CASP to co-found the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project with Rebecca Wasserman. Kate now directs the Milk with Dignity Standards Council, a Burlington-based nonprofit working to ensure the human rights of Vermont's dairy workers. Kate has worked as a researcher and a solidarity activist with social movement organizers in Colombia and is fluent in Spanish, occasionally helping VAAP with interpretation and translation needs.  
Website
Our mailing address is:
50 Lakeside Avenue,
Unit 118-H25
Burlington, VT 05401

Copyright © 2023, Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
 






This email was sent to *|EMAIL|*
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
*|LIST:ADDRESSLINE|*

*|REWARDS|*
Read More
VAAP VAAP

July 2023

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
View this email in your browser

MONTHLY NEWSLETTER

July 2023

UPDATES FROM OUR TEAM

Our thoughts are with those who have been impacted by the devastating flooding in Vermont over the past two weeks.  As Vermonters band together in recovery and relief efforts, we wanted to highlight a way to support Vermont's refugee and immigrant communities through the Association of Africans Living in Vermont (AALV) initiative, New Farms for New Americans

Beginning this fall we will also be launching a project to assist AALV with providing certain pro bono immigration legal services for Afghan nationals in Vermont.  See below to learn more about how to get involved with VAAP's Afghan Project.

We are also thrilled to share that another pro bono attorney volunteering with VAAP recently submitted an asylum seeker's I-589 (asylum) application.  We are so grateful for all the hard work that went into this application process.

Finally, we'd also like to welcome VAAP's co-founder, Kate Paarlberg-Kvam, to the Board! 

PRO BONO NEWS AND TRAINING

Beginning July 31, 2023, USCIS will only accept the 03/01/23 edition of the Form I-589, Application for Asylum and for Withholding of Removal, which is available here.  If you are assisting with an I-589 application, we encourage you to confirm that you are using the correct edition date before submission.

We also wanted to share a training opportunity on August 3rd for pro bono attorneys entitled "Form I-589; Tips for Preparing An Asylum Application, provided by the Immigrant Justice Campaign.  You can register for the webinar
here.

GET INVOLVED

Volunteer Opportunities
We continue to actively match new pro bono attorneys with experienced mentors to work on asylum cases with clients in need of legal assistance.  Please email info@vaapvt.org if you or your firm would like more information about that process!

We also have upcoming opportunities for pro bono attorneys to assist Afghan nationals with seeking asylum and to volunteer at walk-in legal clinics to prepare and file other applications with USCIS.  If you are interested in volunteering for our Afghan Project, please complete the following survey.


Seeking Board Members!
VAAP is looking for dynamic Board members to help us grow our organization.  We seek individuals who are committed to our mission and encourage members of the communities we serve to apply.  Special consideration will be given to those to anyone with an interest or experience in fundraising, public relations, legal, or financial backgrounds.  Please contact us at
info@vaapvt.org to learn more.

Financial Contributions
VAAP is building a budget that would help us support a full-time director to fully resource pro bono asylum attorneys in the State. If you would like to support this growing project, please
donate here.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!
- THE VAAP TEAM

Donate to VAAP
Erin Jacobsen (she/her), Chair of the Board is an Assistant Attorney General at the Office of the Vermont Attorney General and Co-Director of the office’s Community Justice Division, which seeks to improve equity, public safety, and fairness in all aspects of the criminal legal system. She was previously a Professor of Law and Director of the South Royalton Legal Clinic at Vermont Law and Graduate School and the Senior Staff Attorney at Vermont Immigrant Assistance project, where she supervised student clinicians on humanitarian immigration cases and taught Immigration Law and Legislation & Regulation in the classroom.
Caitlin Jenness (she/her), Treasurer lives with her husband Miles on a small homestead in Huntington, VT. In 2013, Caitlin earned her M.B.A from Antioch University in Sustainable Business Management, and has spent the last 10 years working in financial leadership of multiple mission-driven entrepreneurial businesses across Vermont. She is excited to bring her affinity for spreadsheets, budgets and financial planning to the organizational efforts of the VAAP team.
Faith Orr (she/her), Secretary is a first-year law student at Vermont Law and Graduate School. She graduated from Concordia University in Montréal in 2015, specializing in French-to-English translation and worked as a French-to-English translator and legal assistant. Faith has experienced her own immigration challenges, and finally became a Canadian permanent resident last year. She moved back to Vermont during COVID-19 to continue her studies and help to better the lives of asylum seekers in Vermont. She plans to practice immigration law after passing the bar.
Kate Paarlberg-Kvam (she/they) has a PhD in Latin American Studies, and spent ten years teaching college prior to directing the Community Asylum Seekers Project (CASP) in Brattleboro. In that role Kate learned firsthand the transformative power of legal representation for asylum seekers, and worked with CASP to co-found the Vermont Asylum Assistance Project with Rebecca Wasserman. Kate now directs the Milk with Dignity Standards Council, a Burlington-based nonprofit working to ensure the human rights of Vermont's dairy workers. Kate has worked as a researcher and a solidarity activist with social movement organizers in Colombia and is fluent in Spanish, occasionally helping VAAP with interpretation and translation needs.  
Website
Our mailing address is:
50 Lakeside Avenue,
Unit 118-H25
Burlington, VT 05401

Copyright © 2023, Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
 






This email was sent to *|EMAIL|*
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
*|LIST:ADDRESSLINE|*

*|REWARDS|*
Read More
Newsletters VAAP Newsletters VAAP

June 2023

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
View this email in your browser

MONTHLY NEWSLETTER

June 2023

UPDATES FROM OUR TEAM

Dear all,

We know it has been a couple of months since we have sent out our last newsletter but we have been busy behind the scenes streamlining our volunteer process, planning several projects, and forging new partnerships.  We hope to share these initiatives next month!

 In the meantime, we continue to be excited about the work we are doing.  Since March, we have made a new pro bono attorney and asylum seeker match and received news that one of our pro bono attorney teams completed the submission of an I-589 for an asylum seeker. The VAAP Board also had its first meeting at the end of April and is actively recruiting for additional members.

See below for additional news and to learn more about ways to get involved with VAAP!

PRO BONO NEWS

Title 42 Restrictions
Following the end of Title 42, the Administration is putting in place new restrictions at the southern border that will continue to impact a person's ability to seek asylum. These restrictions include new bars to asylum that create obstacles for asylum seekers to exercise their legal right to claim asylum.

On May 11th the Biden Administration lifted Title 42, the pandemic-era public health measure that immigration authorities used to manage and deter asylum seekers and other migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border.

VAAP is committed to supporting the legal right of asylum seekers to gain protection in the United States, regardless of how they enter the country. We encourage you to read more about these restrictions here.

Afghan Re-Parole Process
On June 8th, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) opened a process for eligible Afghan Nationals who arrived under humanitarian parole through the Operation Allies Welcome to request a new period of parole so they can continue to live and work legally in the United States.  Under the law, parole requests are considered on a case-by-case basis for urgent humanitarian reasons and significant public benefit.  Importantly, Afghan parolees who apply for asylum or for adjustment to lawful permanent resident prior to the expiration of their initial parole period do not need to submit an application for re-parole, as DHS will consider for an extension of their original parole period on a case-by-case basis.

Stay tuned to learn more about our plans to support Afghans in Vermont.

GET INVOLVED

We continue to actively match new pro bono attorneys with experienced mentors to work on asylum cases with clients in need of legal assistance. Please email vaap@caspvt.org if you or your firm would like more information about that process! We would also like to hear from you if you are interested in joining our Board.

VAAP is building a budget that would help us support a full-time director to fully resource pro bono asylum attorneys in the State. If you would like to support this growing project, please donate here.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!
- THE VAAP TEAM

Donate to VAAP
Erin Jacobsen (she/her), Chair of the Board is an Assistant Attorney General at the Office of the Vermont Attorney General and Co-Director of the office’s Community Justice Division, which seeks to improve equity, public safety, and fairness in all aspects of the criminal legal system. She was previously a Professor of Law and Director of the South Royalton Legal Clinic at Vermont Law and Graduate School and the Senior Staff Attorney at Vermont Immigrant Assistance project, where she supervised student clinicians on humanitarian immigration cases and taught Immigration Law and Legislation & Regulation in the classroom.
Caitlin Jenness (she/her), Treasurer lives with her husband Miles on a small homestead in Huntington, VT. In 2013, Caitlin earned her M.B.A from Antioch University in Sustainable Business Management, and has spent the last 10 years working in financial leadership of multiple mission-driven entrepreneurial businesses across Vermont. She is excited to bring her affinity for spreadsheets, budgets and financial planning to the organizational efforts of the VAAP team.
Faith Orr (she/her), Secretary is a first-year law student at Vermont Law and Graduate School. She graduated from Concordia University in Montréal in 2015, specializing in French-to-English translation and worked as a French-to-English translator and legal assistant. Faith has experienced her own immigration challenges, and finally became a Canadian permanent resident last year. She moved back to Vermont during COVID-19 to continue her studies and help to better the lives of asylum seekers in Vermont. She plans to practice immigration law after passing the bar.
Website
Copyright © 2023, Vermont Asylum Assistance Project, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
 






This email was sent to *|EMAIL|*
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
*|LIST:ADDRESSLINE|*

*|REWARDS|*
Read More