logo
This is what metro school districts are saying about immigration crackdown across Georgia

This is what metro school districts are saying about immigration crackdown across Georgia

Yahoo28-01-2025
Over the weekend, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents began targeted arrest operations across the Atlanta metro and the rest of the country.
Under new federal immigration policies, ICE agents are allowed to go into schools and churches to arrest illegal immigrants, a change from the Biden administration that had once deemed them safe spaces.
We checked with several metro school districts about this weekend's actions, and this is what they sent us:
Atlanta Public Schools:
'The safety, well-being and educational success of every student enrolled in Atlanta Public Schools is our top priority. In light of recent changes in federal policy around immigration and school protections, we want to reiterate our stance surrounding access to students while they are in school and the rights of students to attend school.
'All children have the Constitutional right to access a K-12 education and receive fair and equitable treatment. The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) protects the privacy of all students. Atlanta Public Schools is committed to maintaining the privacy and protection of every child in our district, regardless of immigration or citizenship status.
'School and district leadership have been reminded of this position and provided specific guidance on interacting with federal immigration officials should any situations arise. We are committed to supporting each of our students and families and ensuring they experience a safe and welcoming learning environment.'
Cobb County Schools:
'Based on the state's reporting guidelines, we do verify residence of students in Cobb County and do not collect or report immigration status of students. We have and will continue to follow the law.'
RELATED STORIES:
Georgia lawmakers split along party lines over ICE targeted operations
Metro Caribbean and African immigrants fear deportation following targeted operations
Immigration attorneys say they are getting inundated with phone calls after weekend ICE actions
ICE launches 'targeted operations' in metro Atlanta
DeKalb County:
'The DeKalb County School District (DCSD) is committed to the safety and success of all students. In line with federal law, DCSD upholds every child's right to a public education, complies with legal requirements, and protects student privacy. To better serve our community, DCSD is awaiting additional guidance on immigration issues from federal and state authorities.'
Gwinnett County:
'In Gwinnett County Public Schools (GCPS), the safety, security, and well-being of our students are our top priorities. Although the federal government has made changes in the way it will enforce immigration policies, as always, GCPS remains committed to upholding the dignity, rights, and safety of each and every student. We will continue to follow our school safety protocols and state and federal laws and ensure the proper execution of judicial orders that clearly define who is authorized to contact students during the school day.'
Rockdale County:
'Rockdale County Public Schools is committed to following all federal and state laws regarding students. Board Policy JBCA (Resident Students) states that 'the school system is not responsible for making determinations regarding students' immigration and visa status.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Today in History: President George H.W. Bush signs the Americans with Disabilities Act
Today in History: President George H.W. Bush signs the Americans with Disabilities Act

Chicago Tribune

time37 minutes ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Today in History: President George H.W. Bush signs the Americans with Disabilities Act

Today is Saturday, July 26, the 207th day of 2025. There are 158 days left in the year. Today in History: On July 26, 1990, President George H.W. Bush signed the Americans with Disabilities Act, prohibiting discrimination based on mental or physical disabilities. Also on this date: In 1775, the Continental Congress established a Post Office and appointed Benjamin Franklin its Postmaster-General. In 1847, the western African country of Liberia, founded by freed American slaves, declared its independence. In 1863, Sam Houston, former president of the Republic of Texas, died in Huntsville at age 70. In 1945, Winston Churchill resigned as Britain's prime minister after his Conservatives were soundly defeated by the Labour Party. Clement Attlee succeeded him. In 1947, President Harry S. Truman signed the National Security Act, which reorganized America's armed forces as the National Military Establishment and created the Central Intelligence Agency. In 1948, President Truman issued Executive Order 9981, which desegregated the U.S. military. In 1953, Fidel Castro began his revolt against Fulgencio Batista with an unsuccessful attack on an army barracks in eastern Cuba. (Castro ousted Batista in 1959.) In 1971, Apollo 15 was launched from Cape Kennedy on America's fourth successful manned mission to the moon. In 2002, the Republican-led House voted to create an enormous Homeland Security Department in the biggest government reorganization in decades. In 2016, Hillary Clinton became the first woman to be nominated for president by a major political party at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia. In 2018, the last six members of a Japanese doomsday cult who remained on death row were executed for a series of crimes in the 1990s, including a gas attack on Tokyo subways that killed 13 people. Previously, seven other cult members were executed on July 6 of that year. In 2020, a procession with the casket of the late U.S. Rep. John Lewis crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Alabama, where Lewis and other civil rights marchers were beaten 55 years earlier. Today's Birthdays: Former Australian Prime Minister John Howard is 86. Football Hall of Famer Bob Lilly is 86. Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Darlene Love is 84. The Rolling Stones' Mick Jagger is 82. Actor Helen Mirren is 80. Rock musician Roger Taylor (Queen) is 76. Olympic gold medal figure skater Dorothy Hamill is 69. Actor Kevin Spacey is 66. Actor Sandra Bullock is 61. Actor Jeremy Piven is 60. Actor Jason Statham is 58. Actor Olivia Williams is 57. Actor Kate Beckinsale is 52. Former New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is 45. Actor Juliet Rylance is 45. Actor Monica Raymund is 39. Actor Francia Raisa is 37. Actor-singer Taylor Momsen is 32. Actor Elizabeth Gillies is 32. Actor Thomasin McKenzie is 25.

Map Shows Region Leading 2050 Global Population Increase
Map Shows Region Leading 2050 Global Population Increase

Newsweek

timean hour ago

  • Newsweek

Map Shows Region Leading 2050 Global Population Increase

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Almost every country in the world has seen fertility rates decline over the past few decades, but one region's birth rates are still so high that it is expected to provide more than half the global population increase until 2050—sub-Saharan Africa. The global fertility rate was 2.2 births per woman last year, down from five in the 1960s and 3.3 in 1990, according to the United Nations World Fertility 2024 report. It is set to hit the replacement level of 2.1 (required to maintain a stable population without immigration) in 2050 and drop below the replacement rate to 1.8 in 2100. America's fertility rate is already below the replacement rate, at 1.6 births per woman, according to the Congressional Budget Office's latest forecast released this year. But sub-Saharan Africa's fertility numbers are the highest of any major world region, at 4.3 children per woman. This high figure is despite the fact that the region, made up of 49 separate African nations, has also seen declines—from 6.5 in the 1960s, to 5.3 in 2000. The UN Commission on Population and Development estimates that over the coming decades, more than half of all new people added to the planet will be in Sub‑Saharan Africa. "Generally, countries in sub-Saharan Africa are in an earlier stage of the demographic transition, characterized by a relatively large share of children and youth," Patrick Gerland, chief of the Population Estimates and Projection Section, told Newsweek. In other words, while countries in the Sahara have followed the rest of the world in lowering death rates, meaning there are more elderly people than there have been before, their higher birth rates mean their populations are mostly children and teenagers. This means that, unlike wealthy countries, which are facing a workforce crisis (not enough working-aged people to support the growing elderly population), nations in sub-Saharan Africa have a growing working-age population. But "investments in areas like education and infrastructure will be crucial" for this to be as beneficial as it could be, Gerland said. "Many African countries are currently experiencing a 'window of opportunity' for economic growth," he said. Could This Be Tomorrow's Workforce? Professor Giovanni Peri, an economist at the University of California, spoke this dynamic - a growing workforce in sub-Saharan Africa with "demographic pressures increasing in rich countries as they age, have fewer workers and higher dependency ratios." "From an economic point of view, it would make sense to think this would generate change in attitude towards migration," he told Newsweek. "So far it has not, and it seems unlikely in the next two decades, at least to me." "From an economist point of view, any reasonable policy that would plan migration in an orderly way from south-Saharan Africa, to jobs and universities in Europe, enforced and implemented well would generate huge economic gains," he said. "I just do not see this happening." Similarly, William Frey, a demographer and senior fellow at The Brookings Institution, told Newsweek: "It is clear that most developed countries, including the US, will need to rely on immigration to counter advanced population aging and declines in their labor force populations." "In the years ahead, the U.S. will require even higher immigration than it currently receives in order to avoid this scenario," said Frey. But "the issues of safety, culture will predominate on the economic rationale," Professor Peri said. Why Does Sub-Saharan Africa Have Such High Birth Rates? "Fertility transitions in sub-Saharan Africa exhibit distinctive characteristics compared to other low- and middle-income countries," the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs said in its report. "The fertility decline started later, and the pace of fertility decline has been markedly slower in sub-Saharan Africa than in Asia and Latin America and the Caribbean," it said. There are many practical reasons for high fertility rates in sub-Saharan Africa, including limited access to contraception, lower levels of education for girls and women and high rates of child marriages. But there are also significant cultural reasons, with children seen as important contributors to household livelihoods and carers of parents in old age. Both men and women in sub-Saharan Africa express a preference for larger families—in Burundi, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda and Zimbabwe, the ideal family size is 3.5 and four, according to the latest Demographic and Health Surveys (conducted between 2010 and 2022). Meanwhile, in Chad, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mali, Niger and Nigeria, the ideal family size is more than six. Conversely, families in wealthier countries are having fewer children while cultural traditions are shifting away from the prioritization of parenthood in general, according to a new study Newsweek reported on here.

The reverse migration: African Americans relocating to Kenya cite heritage and restoration
The reverse migration: African Americans relocating to Kenya cite heritage and restoration

Politico

time2 hours ago

  • Politico

The reverse migration: African Americans relocating to Kenya cite heritage and restoration

'I can't say the administration is the reason why the people I know want to part ways from America. Some are planning to move for a better quality of living life,' Harris said. Auston Holleman, an American YouTuber who has lived in various countries for almost a decade, said he settled on Kenya nine months ago because people 'look like me.' 'It is not like going to Europe or going to some Latin American countries where there are not many Black people,' he said. Holleman, who often films his daily life, said he felt that the social fabric in the U.S. was 'broken.' In contrast, he said he felt socially accepted in Kenya. He cited an experience when his taxi driver's car stopped, and in five minutes they got help from a random stranger. 'That made me realize I was in the right place,' he said. Other African countries have attracted even larger numbers of African Americans. Ghana, which launched a 'Year of the Return' program to attract the Black diaspora in 2019, said last year it held a ceremony that granted citizenship to 524 people, mostly Black Americans. African American businesses such as Adilah Relocation Services have seen a notable rise in the number of African Americans seeking to move to Kenya. The company's founder, Adilah Mohammad, moved to Kenya four days after her mother's funeral in search of healing. She says the peace and restoration she experienced in Kenya made her stay — and advocate for those searching for the same. Her company helps clients relocate by house hunting, shopping for furniture and ensuring banking and medical services are seamless. 'There are 15 families that have come so far, and we have five more on the calendar that are coming in the next 90 days. We have people that have booked for 2026 with no date, they just know that they are leaving,' she says. Mohammad said many African Americans have been planning their move for decades. 'For me it is a movement. It is people deciding to make a choice for themselves, they are not being forced, shackles are being broken. When they say they are coming home, they are choosing to be free and it is mental freedom and so I am ecstatic,' she says. Experts say African economies are likely to benefit from these moves, especially from those willing to tackle corruption and create a healthy environment for investors. Raphael Obonyo, a public policy expert at U.N-Habitat, says the U.S is losing resources — as well as the popular narrative that America is the land of opportunities and dreams. 'This reverse migration is denting that narrative, so America is most likely to lose including things like brain drain,' he explained. For Mohammad, the sense of belonging has given her peace within. 'I love being here. Returning to Africa is one thing, but finding the place that you feel like you belong is another,' she said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store