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COVID changed everything for Georgia group helping migrants

COVID changed everything for Georgia group helping migrants
washingtontimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from washingtontimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Opinion | Advice on Mammograms

Image A debate persists over screening frequency for breast cancer the second leading cause of cancer death for women after lung cancer.Credit.Njeri Mwangi/Reuters To the Editor: We take issue with an editorial in JAMA Internal Medicine that said frequent screening of younger women for breast cancer can do “more harm than good.” As physicians who diagnose and treat breast cancer at Weill Cornell Medicine, we seek to minimize the impact of this disease, which continues to kill about 44,000 American women a year. We are especially concerned about the effect of such misinformation on the health of African-American women, who are more likely to receive a diagnosis of breast cancer at younger ages and are more likely to die from breast cancer at all ages.

Deportations and Arrests of Immigrants in the U S Illegally Fall Sharply Under Biden

Deportations and Arrests of Immigrants in the U.S. Illegally Fall Sharply Under Biden © paul ratje/Reuters WASHINGTON Federal immigration authorities have made sharply fewer arrests and deportations of immigrants in the country illegally since President Biden took office, as the new administration reorients enforcement within the U.S. to focus on those with a serious criminal record. Mr. Biden made a 100-day deportation moratorium one of his key campaign promises, meant to demonstrate his commitment to overhauling U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the agency charged with immigrant arrests, detention and deportations. A federal judge halted that deportation pause days after it was issued in January, but ICE statistics show that enforcement priorities the administration introduced have sharply reduced most of the agency’s activity anyway.

More than 18,500 Individuals Unlawfully Detained by L A County Sheriff s Department Over ICE Holds to Receive Compensation from $14 Million Settlement

Share this article Share this article MEXICO CITY, Feb. 11, 2021 /PRNewswire/  Individuals who were held in L.A. County jail based on ICE holds in the period from October 2010 to June 2014 may be eligible to participate in a financial settlement to compensate them for rights violations committed by the L.A. County Sheriff s Department (LASD). More than 18,500 people are entitled to receive restitution from the $14 million USD settlement. Class members are eligible to receive from $250 to $25,000 based on the time they were held and other details. In order to receive compensation, individuals must submit a claim which does not require them to disclose their immigration status no later than October 10, 2021. All information submitted by claimants will be kept confidential.

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