Dear US-Based colleagues who belong to unions:
Pushing this out in the hope that more public school, higher education & 
medical unions join the growing efforts to support & defend our foreign-born, 
non-naturalized/citizen colleagues. 💪🏽💪🏽✊✊

Please forward to your union leadership.
—Stacy
PS. I’m just forwarding this! I was not involved. Those listed below and our 
union leadership get all the credit & have the expertise!

Sent from my iPhone

Begin forwarded message:



Begin forwarded message:

From: Faculty Staff Union <[email protected]>
Date: May 9, 2025 at 3:09:46 PM EDT
Subject: FSU team wins greater union protections and support for international 
members



Dear UMB community,

Executive orders and federal agency directives issued since January 20, 2025 
have carried numerous threats of detention of visa and green card holders who 
engage in writing, speech, and protest, and have incited fear in all visa and 
green card holders around ordinary travel, the use of social media, and 
applying for immigration status change and naturalization. This past weekend a 
team of FSU members took our demand for material protections and support for 
members who are visa or green card holders/international/foreign-born to our 
statewide parent union, the Massachusetts Teachers Association (MTA). 
[image001.png]  Our 
proposal<https://liveumb-my.sharepoint.com/:b:/g/personal/sana_haroon_umb_edu/EQ-hw9-xRctHg6nq_HOvxNkBfHyrwQ8AGv2G2S24ZXI8Mw?e=5dFjHl>
 to revise the MTA’s legal services policy and to make discounted legal 
services available for international members was considered by almost 800 
delegates and passed with an overwhelming majority of 70.1%

Our parent union has a membership body of 115,000 and an annual budget of $58M. 
Until this past Friday, the MTA has represented union members in any workplace 
related legal case, but has not defended workers whose immigration status is 
threatened for exercising their academic freedoms. The policy change that we 
proposed, and that MTA delegates passed, commits the MTA to extending legal 
representation for any member, K-12 or higher ed, threatened with deportation 
or detention for teaching, writing, speaking or protesting a subject that the 
billionaire’s league wishes to censor. It also requires the MTA to use its heft 
and the size of its membership body to negotiate discounted rates for a range 
of immigration services on behalf of members.

The Federal Government is enacting what a US District Judge described as an 
“ideological-deportation policy targeting protected political speech, and a 
more informal campaign of censorship through threats.” A Brown University 
Professor was deported from Logan Airport despite having a valid work visa and 
a tenured position; Badar Khan Suri, a professor and postdoctoral scholar on 
religion and peace studies from Georgetown University, and Rumeysa Ozturk, a 
graduate student and SEIU union member have been detained and targeted for 
deportation; and Mahmoud Khalil, a Columbia University graduate student and 
green card holder, is under deportation orders. These educators have been 
targeted for their support of Palestine, student rights to protest, and ethical 
investment policies. Other patterns of detention and refusal of entry by US 
Customs and Border Protection officers are based on scrutiny of travelers’ 
personal devices, seriously endangering those visa and green card holders who 
work on race, vaccines, gender and sexuality, climate change, immigration or 
any other subject of inquiry that the federal government is opposed to. Recent 
cancellations of undergraduate and graduate student visas for traffic 
violations and other minor charges indicate an ever increasing scope of attack 
on non-citizens. The threat to our members is substantial: the Institute for 
Immigration Research estimates that 11% of educators across the country are 
foreign born and only half of them are naturalized US citizens. These numbers 
indicate how many of our members are immigrants and that roughly 5-6% of our 
members are currently vulnerable to being targeted on the basis of their 
immigration status

The threats foreign-born educators face today are immediate and terrifying, but 
they are not new. Immigrant educators have faced threats of detention, 
deportation, and denaturalization for exercising their academic freedoms 
throughout US history. This has been true in acute moments of state repression, 
including the 1919 red scare, the McCarthy era, and the period after 9/11, but 
legal threats have also been used to silence foreign-born educators–K-12 as 
well as higher ed–for taking part in anti-war struggles, civil rights 
movements, and, of course, for union organizing. Eruptions of nativism and 
fascism may appear episodically in US history – or so we hope – but the need to 
vigorously protect our immigrant members is, and has been, constant. We are now 
poised at the most dangerous moment in the last half century and a major part 
of the threat is experienced by immigrants.

Our union must protect us because we know our bosses will not. Even where 
administrators are not actively complicit in targeting foreign-born educators – 
as we all have seen happen in recent months – immigration law is, and has 
historically been, a tool of labor control. It is in the boss’ interest to use 
it this way, and this is particularly true when immigrant workers organize. 
When International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) president Harry Bridges 
was threatened with deportation during the 1930s, dockworkers understood that 
this was a strategy to break their union. The same is true in higher education 
today.

As a union that bargains for the common good, the FSU and the MTA know our 
immigrant educators are intimately connected to immigrant communities. When 
foreign-born educators can speak up for their students and families in our 
schools and in our locals without fear, we are all stronger. This is why we 
proposed an amendment to the MTA’s legal services policy that allows the MTA to 
provide legal representation for members threatened with deportation or 
detention for exercising their academic freedoms.

In passing this amendment, the members of the MTA have moved our union to the 
forefront of the struggle for freedoms and protections for international 
educators. Defending the rights of foreign-born educators protects our whole 
union and builds our wider movement to defend public education.



Sana Haroon, Professor, History, FSU Vice President

Rania Said, Assistant Professor, Modern Languages, Literature, and Cultures, 
FSU Executive Committee

Nick Juravich, Assistant Professor, History

Chris Fung, Senior Lecturer, Anthropology

Alejandro Reuss, Lecturer, Labor Resource Center, FSU Executive Committee

Daniela Balanzategui, Assistant Professor, Anthropology









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