NYC teachers’ union coaching educators to help migrants dodge ICE at home and outside school
The NYC teachers’ union is coaching educators on how to help migrant kids and families avoid getting picked up by Immigration and Customs Enforcement at home or in public – going beyond the city’s guidance limited to keeping ICE out of schools.
In Zoom sessions last week, leaders of the United Federation of Teachers urged teachers to print out and distribute “red cards,” a tool created by immigrant advocates to spell out an asylum seeker’s constitutional rights if confronted by ICE officers.
“If ICE comes to the home, you do not have to open the door. In fact, you should not open the door,” UFT rep Katie Kurjakovic said in an hourlong workshop Wednesday on protecting undocumented students and families.
“If you open the door but leave the chain on … that could be interpreted as allowing ICE in, so you should keep the door closed and remain silent. Say ‘I plead the fifth, and choose to remain silent,’” Kurjakovic said teachers should advise.
Those who don’t speak English can slip a “red card” under the door, she added.
Created by the non-profit Immigrant Legal Resource Center (ILRC), the cards state in English and other languages: “I do not wish to speak with you, answer your questions, or sign or hand you any documents based on my 5th Amendment rights under the United States Constitution.”
