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Irish Immigration Center of Philadelphia

News

Irish Immigration Center Receives Irish Government Grant

Ireland's Minister of Foreign Affairs Micheal Martin presents a check to Immigration Center Executive Director Siobhan Lyons.

Ireland's Minister of Foreign Affairs Micheal Martin presents a check to Immigration Center Executive Director Siobhan Lyons.

During a visit to the Irish Immigration Center in Philadelphia last week, Ireland’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Micheal Martin presented Center Director Siobhan Lyons with a check for $117,000. The Irish Center is one of the recipients of the Irish Abroad grant, funded by The Department of Foreign Affairs.

Joining Martin on his visit were Noel Kilkenny, recently appointed Irish Consul; Michael Collins, Ambassador of Ireland to the U.S.; David Cooney, who heads Ireland’s United Nations Mission in New York; and Vice Consul Alan Farrelly.

They were welcomed warmly by a strong turnout from the Irish-American community.

The donation will go a long way towards funding some of The Center’s planned initiatives, most directly the expansion of the senior community activities.

“We’re deeply grateful for the money,” Lyons said. “The Irish government is one of the most generous donators to The Immigration Center.”

“One of our goals for 2011 is to staff a full-time social worker, someone who will be able to reach out to the elderly, our most vulnerable population. There is a growing number of aging immigrants, many of whom are shut-ins who can’t make it out here to The Center. By employing a social worker, someone who’s from the Irish Community, or Ireland, we’ll be able to reach those people who are most in need of our assistance. Having someone culturally sensitive to the needs of the immigrant community means that they’ll be able to establish a rapport quickly and get to the issues straight away.”

Music

A Little Lunch Music

Kathleen Murtagh enjoys the music.

Kathleen Murtagh enjoys the music.

It takes a lot to quiet down the regulars at Wednesday’s Senior Lunch at the Irish Immigration Center of Philadelphia, but this week the usual chatter din dimmed as Dublin-born musician John Byrne and bandmate Chris Buchanan serenaded the ladies—and gents—who lunch.

There was some singing along too, though the many song requests caused Byrne at one point to retort, “Ladies, you need a jukebox.”

Videos:

People

A Little Lunch With Her Friends

Immigration Center regular Kathleen Murtagh tries on Mairead Conley's new crown.

Immigration Center regular Kathleen Murtagh tries on Mairead Conley's new crown. (Click on the photo to view the slideshow.

The regular Wednesday Lunch at The Irish Immigration Center of Philadelphia had a special purpose and special guests this past week. The Center’s Deputy Director of Community Programming, Mairead Conley, was celebrated for her recent selection as the Midatlantic Rose of Tralee.

Karen Boyce McCollum, herself the 2005 Philadelphia Rose of Tralee, was on hand to graciously oblige the crowd by singing the song that started it all. While Kathleen Murtagh, who was one of the encouraging voices that convinced Mairead to enter her name this year, got a chance to try on the tiara.

And in keeping with Center Director Siobhan Lyons’ motto that “all are welcome,” 2010 Rosebud Grace Murphy brought her Dachshund puppy Daisy to help toast Mairead.

“We really do welcome everyone,” Siobhan laughed. “We’re here to help anyone who can use our services.”

Check out our photos from the afternoon, at upper right.

News, People

Two Local Women Named to Irish Echo’s “40 Under 40” List

Sarah Conaghan and Siobhan Lyons.

Sarah Conaghan and Siobhan Lyons.

Sarah Conaghan, managing director of the Mid-Atlantic Rose of Tralee Centre, and Siobhan Lyons, executive director of the Irish Immigration Center of Greater Phildelphia, were named to the Irish Echo newspaper’s “40 under 40” list, which recognizes 40 people of Irish descent who, as publish Mairtin O’ Muilleoir describes them, are “high flyers who can taste, see, and shape the future.”

Conaghan, 33, of Villanova, founded the Rose of Tralee Center in Philadelphia in 2002, which was the first year a Philadelphia contestant was represented in the international competition in Tralee, County Kerry, now in its 41st year. An outgrowth of Tralee’s traditional Carnival Queen, a town event, the Rose Festival is now broadcast on Irish TV every year. When Conaghan and her sisters would visit their Donegal grandmother every summer, she says, they would be glued to the TV, scoring the contestants on their hair and gowns. While other girls her age dreamt of being Miss America, Conaghan says she always wanted to be a Rose.

She never became one, but today, she helps other young women achieve their dream. When she is not busy (very busy) working the Philadelphia and Mid-Atlantic Rose events (March 27 and June 26 this year), she is active in immigration reform activities (her father, Tom, is the founder of the Irish Immigration Center in Philadelphia), volunteers at the Commodore Barry Memorial Library at the Irish Center, serves on the Inspirational Irish Women Awards committee and is a member of the Donegal Association.

Siobhan Lyons, 36, was born in Dublin, but led the peripatetic life of the daughter of an Irish diplomat, growing up Nairobi, London, Washington, DC, and Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. She majored in Arabic at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. She spent some time in the Irish diplomatic corps in the Irish Department of Foreign Affairs and, when her then-husband’s work took him to the US, she volunteered at variety of nonprofits. Prior to taking over the helm of the Irish Immigration Center last year, Lyons was director of communications and foundation for the World Affairs Council in Philadelphia.

Since she became executive director of the Immigration Center, located in Upper Darby, Lyons has launched a community-wide survey of the needs of both immigrations and Irish-Americans alike with an eye to providing a greater range of services. Irish Consul General Niall Burgess spoke at a reception at the center marking the survey launch. She has also forged a new partnership between the center and the Drexel Law School to help provide regular confidential legal counseling services to Irish community members dealing with immigration issues and more. Every Saturday in March this year, the center is hosting workshops to help Irish immigrants to apply for citizenship and Irish-Americans get their Irish citizenship, available to anyone whose parents or grandparents were born in Ireland.

In the past few years, Philadelphia has been represented on this prestigious annual list by Karen Boyce McCollum, associate director of corporate communications at Cephalon and well known Irish singer formerly with the band, Causeway, and Theresa Flanagan Murtagh, an attorney and former president of the Donegal Association who has her own band (The Theresa Flanagan Band).

News

Help Build Support for Immigration Reform

With the introduction of a new bill in the U.S. House, immigration is back on the table again. Siobhán Lyons, executive director of the Irish Immigration Center of Philadelphia, wants you to forget past setbacks and help rally support for legislation to bring 50,000 undocumented Irish out of the cold.

“We need to get people talking again and to feel that this is something we could possibly do,” she says. “Sitting around and saying ‘we tried it before and it didn’t work’ will guarantee that nothing will happen.”

You can get involved and learn more about the Comprehensive Immigration Reform for America’s Security and Prosperity (CIR ASAP) Act at a special “happy hour” meeting hosted by the Irish Immigration Center Tuesday night at 5:30 at Tír na nÓg, 1600 Arch Street in Philadelphia.

“Our goals are modest,” Lyons says. “We just want to start a conversation about immigration in the Irish community. There won’t be a lot of ‘speeching.’ The main goal is to get people together and spread the word that immigration reform is back in the House.”

Aside from desperately needed visa reform, Lyons says, the new legislation would set forth a path to legal residency and perhaps full-fledged citizenship. Under the provisions of CIR ASAP, undocumented immigrants could apply for conditional residence. After six years, they’d be able to apply for green cards. “At some point, then, the 50,000 Irish who are undocumented would have a solution,” Lyons says.

Lyons would also like to see House lawmakers consider negotiation of a bilateral treaty between Ireland and the United States to establish E3 visas along the lines of a similar agreement between the Republic and Australia. E3 visas would permit skilled Irish workers to come to the U.S. to work for a period of two years, and allow them to renew those visas indefinitely.

Given the current state of the U.S. economy, some might say it’s a bad time to be making it easier for undocumented immigrants to compete for jobs. But, Lyons says, a lot of undocumented immigrants are here already. “These people have jobs,” she says. “This (legislation) would free them to earn more and spend more and to negotiate for higher wages across the board.”

Tír na nÓg is donating the space for free, with happy hour specials, Lyons notes. She hopes that this meeting will trigger still more meetings on the subject. “If this meeting is successful, we’ll try for more,” she says. “If we all work together we can absolutely make this happen.”

News

Bring Your Legal Problems—Help is Free

Have an immigration problem? A landlord dispute? Any messy legal situation you don’t know how to deal with?

The Irish Immigration Center is offering a free Legal and Immigration Clinic with the help of the Brehon Law Society and Drexel Law School every fourth Tuesday of the month, starting on October 27, from 3 to 6 PM.

Criminal and family lawyers are also available on request.

You need an appointment for these confidential clinics. Call 610-789-6355 to make one. The Irish Immigration Center is at 7 South Cedar Lane in Upper Darby.

News

Irish Represented at This Week’s Immigration Rallies

Sarah Conaghan at Monday's Philadelphia rally.

Sarah Conaghan at Monday's Philadelphia rally.

He was eight when his father left home, reluctantly leaving his family behind to travel thousands of miles across the ocean to America to earn money to support them. He was 16 when he next saw his father. It was, he says, the meeting of two strangers.

“When he left, I was little. When I next saw him, I was taller than my father. And he was not familiar to me. He was shocked when he saw me too.”

It could be any immigrant’s story, this old familiar tale of desperation and families torn apart. But in this case it belongs to Xu Lin, a young man born in China’s Fujian Province whose father is now trapped in America without a green card.

“My grandmother passed away two years ago and in our tradition, the oldest son should be there to send his parents away,” Lin told a crowd gathered for an immigration reform rally in the shadow of Philadelphia’s City Hall on Monday, October 12. “My father is the oldest son in the family, but he could not go because of his immigration status. I feel really sad for my dad and grandmother.”

The rally, organized by the group Reform Immigration for America, was a send-off for a handful of local people who were traveling to Washington, DC, the next day to attend a larger rally at the Capitol to demand action on immigration reform before the end of the year.

Nearly 8,000 people—including representatives from Philadelphia’s Irish Immigration Center—spent the day lobbying in congressional offices and massing on the Capitol lawn to show support for new programs that will make it easier for immigrants to become citizens and for the abolition of old programs that make them criminals.

One of those local representatives was Sarah Conaghan, a Delaware County woman whose father, Tom Conaghan, founded the Irish Immigration Center. She stressed the need to “put a different face” on immigration, one that reflects the true diversity of immigrants “who come from Ireland, Honduras, Poland, every country you can imagine.”

The Pennsylvania group met with aides for Bucks County Rep. Patrick Murphy, Delaware County Rep. Joe Sestak and Senators Bob Casey Jr. and Arlen Specter, though their lobbying was preaching to the converted. Those lawmakers are on record as supporting immigration reform.

Among the proposed laws immigration reformers would like to see passed is the Reuniting Families Act, set in play by New Jersey Senator Robert Menedez, New York Senators Charles Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, and the late Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts. The bill would end lengthy wait times for foreign-born relatives of US citizens and permanent residents to be granted visas. There is currently an immigration processing backlog of 5.8 million people, or about 20,000 people a year. Supporters say that the US economy takes a hit as a result: Many of these people are at retirement age when they finally arrive so are unable to join the workforce or pay taxes.

While the rally was going on in Washington, Siobhan Lyons, executive director of the Philadelphia Irish Immigration Center, was in New York with a coalition of Irish groups meeting with Irish Foreign Minister Micheal Martin. Martin was doing the rounds of national lawmakers to take a read on the future of the reform bills now on the table. “He said that there’s a small window at the beginning of the year where we need to get comprehensive reform in,” says Lyons.

In past years, the Irish got a special pass. “The Irish have benefited from special visa programs and there has been a hope in the Irish community that we’ll get this again, but it’s not happening,” says Lyons. And, she says, it shouldn’t. There are an estimated 50,000 undocumented Irish in the US. There are millions of Hispanics.

“The whole coalition of Irish immigration organization is planning a push—it might be a postcard campaign—to make sure that the entire community gets behind comprehensive reform that applies to everyone, with no ethnic group singled out.”

She says she’s hoping the Irish have long memories. “Not long ago, the Irish were met with signs that said, ‘No Irish need apply.’ We were once the immigrants no one wanted. We know what it’s like to be the people everyone hates. It all turned out great for us. . .and everyone else.”

For Conaghan, the current immigration situation has a “there but for the grace of God go I” component. It’s personal.

“I’m the daughter of two immigrants and when they came here in the 1970s, there was a road to citizenship then and they took it,” says Conaghan. “Since 1996, our community been devastated something called the Illegal Immigration Reform Act, which removed every legal road and bridge for Irish immigrants to become citizens. It eliminated the path to legalization. Their punishment: Those who remain 180 days after their visas are up can be barred from returning to the US for up to 20 years. The result of all this is that people who remained because they had put down roots—they settled down and had kids—have been trapped here, living in the shadows for over 15 years. I know some of these families and they haven’t been able to go back to see grandparents who live in Ireland.”

Roughly 20 percent of Pennsylvania’s population has Irish roots, with a million Irish and Irish-Americans living in the Philadelphia metropolitan area.

“Yet our historic contribution to this country has been ignored,” says Conaghan. “This is such an important issue for our community locally, and every community. Our country was built by immigrants.”

News

Put the Green In Immigration Reform

You may not know if from the national controversy over immigration reform, but some illegal aliens have Irish accents. And with double-digit inflation in Ireland, the number of undocumented Irish in the US is bound to increase.Put on something green and head down to City Hall on Monday, October 12, at 11:15 AM for a rally to support immigration reform.

“It is vital that the Irish community plays a visible role in the campaign for immigration reform, and I would love to see a green bloc at the rally,” says Siobhan Lyons, executive director of the Irish Immigration Center of Philadelphia.

The rally is scheduled the day before a major rally and march on Washington, DC, where immigration reform groups from all over the country will converge.  The Irish Immigration Center is sending a delegation. For more information, contact the center at 610-789-6355.