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For Immediate Release |
Contact: Matt Adams |
Northwest Immigrant Rights Project & Partners Target “Asylum Clock” in Class Action Lawsuit
Seattle, WA -- Northwest Immigrant Rights Project (NWIRP) today asked a federal court to certify as a class action a suit filed last week alleging widespread problems with the “asylum clock”—the system government agencies use to determine when immigrants who have applied for asylum may obtain permission to lawfully work in the United States. In general, federal laws require the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice to adjudicate asylum applications within six months. If the application is not denied or completed within six months, the applicant is entitled to obtain employment authorization (a work permit) while waiting on the agency to complete the process.
The complaint, co-filed with the American Immigration Council’s Legal Action Center (LAC), Seattle firm Gibbs Houston Pauw, and the Massachusetts Law Reform Institute, was submitted on behalf of hundreds of asylum applicants across the country who were wrongfully denied work permits due to unlawful agency policies.
“Despite knowing of these problems for years, the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security have failed to address them in a meaningful manner,” said Matt Adams, legal director of Northwest Immigrant Rights Project. “Too many people are left in abject poverty for months and sometimes years, while waiting for their asylum application to be resolved. All they seek is the opportunity to support themselves while their applications are pending.”
Plaintiffs allege that the current system unlawfully denies asylum applicants the opportunity to obtain employment authorization if their case has been pending for six months or more. Some end up waiting several months or years for their applications to be completed. Employment authorization is critical as most applicants have fled their home countries without any resources, and are left without a means to support themselves. Named plaintiffs include a man from China who has been waiting eight years for his case to be resolved.
The complaint alleges three main problems with the “asylum clock”:
- Decisions related to the “clock” are made without notice to the asylum seeker and are not subject to sufficient review.
- The “clock” does not start until the first hearing before an immigration judge, regardless of when the asylum application was filed, and independent of the first available hearing date, even if it is many months in the future.
- The immigration court refuses to start or restart the “clock” in cases that have been reversed on appeal. The clock is not started or restarted on cases that were formerly denied but are now back before the immigration judge.
Click below for:
PDF of Press Release
Class Action Complaint
Motion For Class Certification
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Northwest Immigrant Rights Project promotes justice for low-income immigrants by pursuing and defending their legal status. We focus on providing direct legal services, supported by our education and public policy work. NWIRP is the only entity in the list of “Free Legal Services” that is given to individuals placed in removal (aka deportation) proceedings in Washington State.
Northwest Immigrant Rights Project Press Releases:
- Northwest Immigrant Rights Project Presents: 28th Anniversary Celebration
- NWIRP Challenges Local Law Enforcement Use of U.S. Border Patrol Agents as “Interpreters”
- Lawsuit Challenges Unconstitutional Stops and Interrogations by Border Patrol Agents on Olympic Peninsula
- Federal Judge Certifies Class Action Asserting Right to Counsel for Immigrant Detainees with Mental Disabilities
- Northwest Immigrant Rights Project & Partners Target “Asylum Clock” in Class Action Lawsuit
- Northwest Immigrant Rights Project Presents: An Evening at Wing Luke, Celebrating 27 Years of Reuniting Families
- Minor Changes to "Secure Communities" Do Not Address Inherent Problems with the Program
- Man Nearly Deported Awaiting Asylum Decision for Sixteen Years
- Northwest Immigrant Rights Project Celebrates 27 Years of Service to Washington State Immigrants and Refugees
- DHS Agrees to Pay $400,000 to U.S. Citizen, Army Veteran, Unlawfully Detained by Immigration for Over Seven Months
- Federal Court Rules in Favor of NWIRP Client, Reaffirms Protections for Immigrant Survivors of Domestic Violence
- Immigrants Win Right to Representation
- Northwest Immigrant Rights Project & Center for Justice Achieve Settlement in Case of Immigrant Detained Unlawfully
- Northwest Immigrant Rights Project & Partners File First Class-Action Lawsuit On Behalf of Immigrants with Mental Disabilities
- United States v. Arizona racial profiling law
- Northwest Immigrant Rights Project, Legal Voice, Latina/o Bar Association of Washington, National Employment Law Project and ACLU of Washington Unite to Praise Washington Supreme Court Decision Protecting the Integrity of the Court System
- NWIRP to receive national recognition
- NWIRP to Celebrate 25 Years of Serving Immigrant Communities
- NWIRP E.D. Jorge Baron on KUOW 94.9
- NWIRP Wins "Moving Mountains" award from Office of Crime Victims Advocacy
- NWIRP wins City of Seattle Human Rights Award
- Federal Appeals Court Rules For Jamaican Gay Man and NWIRP Client, Finds “Pattern or Practice” of Persecution Against Gay Jamaican Men
- Settlement Reached in Lawsuit Challenging Unreasonable Delays Granting Citizenship
- U.S. Citizen and Army Veteran Spends Nine Months In Detention While U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Denies Detaining Citizens
- NWIRP Expresses Its Opposition to Planned Expansion of DHS Detention Center
- Matt Adams Wins National Excellence in Litigation Award
