Press release: there is no executive order to shield 5 million illegals and no executive order to grant tech visas, no executive order from Nov 20 or Nov 21 2014 at all
Posted on | November 22, 2014 | 27 Comments
2014 Executive Orders Disposition Tables
Barack Obama – 2014
Executive Order 13656
Establishment of Afghanistan and Pakistan Strategic Partnership Office and Amendment to Executive Order 12163
- Signed: January 17, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 4263, January 24, 2014
- Amends: EO 12163, September 29, 1979
Executive Order 13657
Changing the Name of the National Security Staff to the National Security Council Staff
- Signed: February 10, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 8823, February 14, 2014
Executive Order 13658
Establishing a Minimum Wage for Contractors
- Signed: February 12, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 9851, February 20, 2014
- See: EO 13673, July 31, 2014
Executive Order 13659
Streamlining the Export/Import Process for America’s Businesses
- Signed: February 19, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 10657, February 25, 2014
Executive Order 13660
Blocking Property of Certain Persons Contributing to the Situation in Ukraine
- Signed: March 6, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 13493, March 10, 2014
- See: EO 13661, March 16, 2014; EO 13662, March 20, 2014
Executive Order 13661
Blocking Property of Additional Persons Contributing to the Situation in Ukraine
- Signed: March 16, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 15535, March 19, 2014
- See: EO 13660, March 6, 2014; EO 13662, March 20, 2014
Executive Order 13662
Blocking Property of Additional Persons Contributing to the Situation in Ukraine
- Signed: March 20, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 16169, March 24, 2014
- See: EO 13660, March 6, 2014; EO 13661, March 16, 2014
Executive Order 13663
Establishing an Emergency Board to Investigate Disputes Between the Long Island Rail Road Company and Certain of Its Employees Represented by Certain Labor Organizations
- Signed: March 25, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 16647, March 25, 2014
- See: EO 13654, November 21, 2013
Executive Order 13664
Blocking Property of Certain Persons With Respect to South Sudan
- Signed: April 3, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 19283, April 7, 2014
Executive Order 13665
Non-Retaliation for Disclosure of Compensation Information
- Signed: April 8, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 20749, April 11, 2014
- Amends: EO 11246, September 24, 1965
Executive Order 13666
Expanding Eligibility for the Defense Meritorious Service Medal
- Signed: April 18, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 22591, April 23, 2014
- Amends: EO 12019, November 3, 1977
Executive Order 13667
Blocking Property of Certain Persons Contributing to the Conflict in the Central African Republic
- Signed: May 12, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 28387, May 15, 2014
Executive Order 13668
Ending Immunities Granted to the Development Fund for Iraq and Certain Other Iraqi Property and Interests in Property Pursuant to Executive Order 13303, as Amended
- Signed: May 27, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 31019, May 29, 2014
- See: EO 13303, May 22, 2003; EO 13364, November 29, 2004; EO 13315, August 28, 2003
Executive Order 13669
2014 Amendments to the Manual for Courts-Martial, United States
- Signed: June 13, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 34999, June 18, 2014
- Amends: EO 12473, April 13, 1984
Executive Order 13670
Establishing an Emergency Board To Investigate Disputes Between the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority and Certain of Its Employees Represented by Certain Labor Organizations
- Signed: June 14, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 35029, June 18, 2014
- See: EO 13679, October 10, 2014
Executive Order 13671
Taking Additional Steps to Address the National Emergency With Respect to the Conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Signed: July 8, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 39949, July 10, 2014
- Amends: EO 13413, October 27, 2006
Executive Order 13672
Further Amendments to Executive Order 11478, Equal Employment Opportunity in the Federal Government, and Executive Order 11246, Equal Employment Opportunity
- Signed: July 21, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 42971, July 23, 2014
- Amends: EO 11246, September 24, 1965; EO 11478, August 8, 1969
Executive Order 13673
Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces
- Signed: July 31, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 45309, August 5, 2014
- See: EO 11246, September 24, 1965; EO 13658, February 12, 2014
Executive Order 13674
Revised List of Quarantinable Communicable Diseases
- Signed: July 31, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 45671, August 6, 2014
Executive Order 13675
Establishing the President’s Advisory Council on Doing Business in Africa
- Signed: August 5, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 46661, August 8, 2014
- See: EO 12870, September 30, 1993
Executive Order 13676
Combating Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria
- Signed: September 18, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 56931, September 23, 2014
Executive Order 13677
Climate-Resilient International Development
- Signed: September 23, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 58231, September 26, 2014
- See: EO 13514, October 5, 2009; EO 13653, November 1, 2013
Executive Order 13678
Conversion Authority for Criminal Investigators (Special Agents) of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives
- Signed: October 3, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 60949, October 8, 2014
Executive Order 13679
Establishing an Emergency Board to Investigate a Dispute Between the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority and Its Locomotive Engineers Represented by the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen
- Signed: October 10, 2014
- Federal Register page and date: 79 FR 62323, October 17, 2014
- See: EO 13670, June 14, 2014
Video and Transcript: Obama’s immigration speech
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/transcript-obamas-immigration-speech/2014/11/20/14ba8042-7117-11e4-893f-86bd390a3340_story.html
The White House
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release November 20, 2014
Remarks by the President in Address to the Nation on Immigration
https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/11/20/remarks-president-address-nation-immigration
Obama’s Speech: NBC’s New York Station Thumbs Nose At Network And Carries POTUS; Other Stations Follow Suit
https://deadline.com/2014/11/obama-immigration-primetime-speech-tv-networks-1201291124/
The White House provided a link to watch the speech live.
Here’s What the President Is Doing to Fix Our Broken Immigration System:
Tonight at 8 p.m. ET, the President will address the nation on the new steps he’s taking to increase accountability and fix what he can in our immigration system. You can watch his address live here.
(more info at the link)
https://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2014/11/20/here-s-what-president-doing-fix-our-broken-immigration-system
Comments
27 Responses to “Press release: there is no executive order to shield 5 million illegals and no executive order to grant tech visas, no executive order from Nov 20 or Nov 21 2014 at all”
Leave a Reply
November 22nd, 2014 @ 7:15 am
Exactly what part of Obama did not sign any new Executive Orders on immigration do you not get?
You won’t find any because there are none.
November 22nd, 2014 @ 8:46 am
https://politics.suntimes.com/article/washington/obamas-immigration-executive-order-here-are-details/thu-11202014-705pm
The actual text has yet to be found. Apparently not officially posted.
November 22nd, 2014 @ 9:09 am
DHIMMITIZATION is the goal
CONSTITUTION in the hole
TAQIYYA is the tool
AMERICA thought the fool
THE PEOPLE, they are CLEVER
LONG THE LIVE the REPUBLIC..FOREVER and EVER!
November 22nd, 2014 @ 9:29 am
He kept referring to it as a MEMO. I thought that was a cover word for executive order, maybe not.
November 22nd, 2014 @ 9:47 am
there is no such order, just like there are no valid IDs
November 22nd, 2014 @ 10:53 am
WH says these are Executive Actions which are not Executive Orders. You are correct; there are no Executive Orders nor will there be. It seems you are running into the same thing as in your immigration law suit. Obama maintains he has supposed “discretionary” power under the Law to do this.
November 22nd, 2014 @ 11:17 am
Orly: I think it’s due to the fact that the (R)’s have come out swinging and are ready for bear!
And O knows they are not going to play any more games…especially when the new members show up in January!
November 22nd, 2014 @ 11:25 am
Hey, Pauly: why isn’t there anything to really help protect the illegals…?
Why wouldn’t he (O) list this or that where it can be seen?
Is it due to the (R)’s showing their fangs and not putting up with any more B.S.?
You post another onery, flippant knee-jerk reaction!
November 22nd, 2014 @ 11:44 am
i guess when you are an absolute Monarch you don’t have to do the paper work. You just say off with your head and it gets done.
November 22nd, 2014 @ 11:57 am
It looks like Obama has taken lessons from Slick Willie.
He has directed agencies to do “certain things”, “within the law,” to isolate him from legal action:
https://www.dhs.gov/immigration-action?utm_source=hp_feature&utm_medium=web&utm_campaign=dhs_hp
November 22nd, 2014 @ 2:38 pm
A memo will not be legally binding. No way!
He has to issue a certified standing order,
co-signed by the WH Legal Counsel and OMB and
OPM, and place same in the NARA Register (US
Archives). For a 60-90 day comment period.
Then, the memo must be distributed to ALL sitting
Cabinet heads, not just interim ones. Then, ditto, to all Congressional and Senatorial Chairmen, sitting not Interim/Acting.
Then, he may face some lawsuits or restraining
order attempts on appeal.
He will probably triumph in the end. What can
we do???
I am resigned and defeated.
What about you, Danno???
November 22nd, 2014 @ 3:33 pm
Ice agents are saying they are not allowed to do their job but instead sit in offices reading yahoo. The officers claim the borders are wide open. No instructions have been given to them as they are in the dark.
https://www.debbieschlussel.com/75847/ice-agent-my-job-is-now-obsolete-borders-now-wide-open-career-ice-official-were-being-kept-in-dark-40-mlln-amnesty-not-just-5-mlln/
November 22nd, 2014 @ 4:24 pm
js/js – I’m not Danno – but I’m hoping that soon somehow enough people will have their eyes/ears opened to the “other issue” – – is Mr. O. legally occupying his post? If “the other issue” becomes the light, then wouldn’t EVERYTHING change?
November 22nd, 2014 @ 6:24 pm
Executive orders or only valid to administer the executive offices. They are not valid to the citizens. We do not have to obey Executive orders.
November 23rd, 2014 @ 10:42 am
The following details government spending ($51 Billion 2014 Budget)for The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) and one of its beneficiary programs: Office for Refugee Resettlement (ORR). Funding for all this from a country that has Trillions of dollars in deficit spending…
**************
The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) is a division of the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). It is headed by the Assistant Secretary for Children and Families. It has a $49 billion budget for 60 programs that target children, youth and families.[1] These programs include assistance with welfare, child support enforcement, adoption assistance, foster care, child care, and child abuse. ($51 BILLION 2014 BUDGET.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Administration_for_Children_and_Families
*****************
Partnering with states and communities, ACF funding provides critical assistance to vulnerable populations and helps families achieve prosperity and independence. ACF-funded programs find safe and supportive families for abused children, help parents find jobs, support individuals with developmental disabilities, and work with troubled teens to leave the streets and find a path toward hope and opportunity.
Visit the Office of Legislative Affairs & Budget website for details on all of our current, proposed and past budget information.
The pie chart (see at link) shows the ACF FY 2014 Budget Breakdown: Temporary Assistance for Needy Families: 34%, Foster Care and Permanency: 14%, Head Start: 17%, Child Support Enforcement and Family Support: 8%, Child Care and Development Fund: 10%, LIHEAP: 7%, Social Services Block Grant: 3% and Other ACF Programs: 7%.
https://www.acf.hhs.gov/about/budget
**********
ORR(Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) is a program of the Administration for Children and Families (ACF), an office within the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), created with the passing of the United States Refugee Act of 1980 (Public Law 96-212). The ORR offers support for refugees seeking safe haven within the United States, including victims of human trafficking, those seeking asylum from persecution, survivors of torture and war, and unaccompanied alien children. The mission and purpose of the ORR is to assist in the relocation process and provide needed services to individuals granted asylum within the United States.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Office_of_Refugee_Resettlement
****************
The Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) gives new populations the opportunity to maximize their potential in the United States. ORR’s programs provide people in need with critical resources to assist them in becoming integrated members of American society, such as cash, social services, and medical assistance.
ORR benefits and services are available to eligible persons from the following groups:
Refugees
Asylees
Cuban/Haitian entrants
Amerasians
Victims of human trafficking
Unaccompanied alien children
Survivors of torture
ORR has four divisions and one major program area:
Refugee Assistance
Resettlement Services
Children’s Services
Anti-Trafficking in Persons
Office of the Director
Division of Refugee Assistance:
The Division of Refugee Assistance (DRA) supports, oversees and provides guidance to State-Administered, Public Private Partnership and Wilson/Fish programs that provide assistance and services to refugees, asylees, certain Amerasian immigrants, Cuban and Haitian entrants, and Certified Victims of Human Trafficking (henceforth referred to collectively as refugees). DRA reviews and monitors state plans, budget submissions, service plans, and reports, while providing technical assistance to ensure that federal regulations are followed and adequate services and performance are maintained. The ultimate goal is to provide the types of assistance that will allow refugees to become economically self-sufficient as soon as possible after their arrival in the United States. DRA also includes the newly-formed Refugee Health Team, which coordinates with state and federal partners to advance ORR’s health initiatives.
Program structures:
State Administered: Cash, medical, and social services are primarily managed by states as part of their social service or labor force programs. The program goal is to enable refugees become self-sufficient as soon as possible.
Public Private Partnership: This partnership provides States the option to enter into a partnership with local voluntary resettlement agencies to provide cash assistance to refugees. The objective is to create more effective resettlement, while maintaining state responsibility for policy and administrative oversight.
Wilson-Fish: The program is an alternative to the traditional state administered refugee resettlement program. This program provides cash, medical assistance, and social services to refugees. The purpose of the Wilson-Fish program is to increase refugee prospects for early employment and self-sufficiency, promote coordination among voluntary resettlement agencies and service providers, and ensure that refugee assistance programs exist in every state where refugees are resettled.
DRA is responsible for the following programs:
Cash and Medical Assistance: This program provides reimbursement to states and other programs for cash and medical assistance. Refugees who are ineligible for TANF and Medicaid may be eligible for cash and medical assistance for up to eight months from their date of arrival, grant of asylum, or date of certification for trafficking victims.
Refugee Social Services: This program allocates formula funds to states to serve refugees who have been in the United States less than 60 months (five years). Services are focused on addressing employability and include interpretation and translation, day care, citizenship, and naturalization. Services are designed to help refugees obtain jobs within one year of enrollment.
Targeted Assistance: This program allocates formula funds to states that qualify for additional funds due to an influx of refugee arrivals that need public assistance. TAG service prioritize (a) cash assistance recipients, particularly long-term recipients; (b) unemployed refugees not receiving cash assistance; and (c) employed refugees in need of services to retain employment or to attain economic independence.
Cuban Haitian: This program provides discretionary grants to states and other programs to fund assistance and services in localities with a heavy influx of Cuban and Haitian entrants and refugees. This program supports employment services, hospitals, and other health and mental health care programs, adult and vocational education services, refugee crime or victimization programs, and citizenship and naturalization services.
Refugee Preventive Health: This program provides discretionary grants to states or their designated health agencies or other programs that facilitate medical screenings and support health services. The program aims to reduce the spread of infectious disease, treat any current ailments, and promote preventive health practices.
Refugee School Impact: This program provides discretionary grants to state and other programs. Funds go to school districts to pay for activities that will lead to the effective integration and education of refugee children between the ages of 5 and 18. Activities include English as a second language; after-school tutorials; programs that encourage high school completion and full participation in school activities; after-school and/or summer clubs and activities; parental involvement programs; bilingual/bicultural counselors; interpreter services, etc.
Services to Older Refugees: This program provides discretionary grants to states to ensure that refugees aged 60 and above are linked to mainstream aging services in their community. ORR cooperates with the Administration for Community Living to reach this goal.
Targeted Assistance Discretionary: This program provides discretionary grants to states and other programs to address the employment needs of refugees that cannot be met with the Formula Social Services or Formula Targeted Assistance Grant Programs. Activities under this program are for the purpose of supplementing and/or complementing existing employment services to help refugees achieve economic self-sufficiency.
Division of Resettlement Services
The Division of Resettlement Services (DRS) provides assistance through public and private non-profit agencies to support the economic and social integration of refugees. DRS is responsible for the following programs:
Matching Grant Program: This is an alternative program to public assistance designed to enable refugees to become self-sufficient within four to six months from the date of arrival into the United States. Eligible grantees are voluntary agencies able to coordinate comprehensive multilingual, multicultural services for refugees at local sites; the same agencies are under cooperative agreements with the Department of State/Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration (PRM).
Services to Survivors of Torture Program: This program provides funding for a comprehensive program of support for survivors of torture. The Torture Victims Relief Act of 1998 recognizes that a significant number of refugees, asylees, and asylum seekers entering the United States have suffered torture. The program provides rehabilitative services which enable survivors to become productive members of our communities.
Refugee Agriculture Partnership Program: The Refugee Agriculture Partnership Program (RAPP) involves refugees in the effort to improve the supply and quality of food in urban and rural areas. Refugees are potential farmers or producers of more healthful foods, as well as consumers whose health and well-being are affected by diet. RAPP has evolved into a program with multiple objectives that include: creating sustainable income; producing supplemental income; having an adequate supply of healthy foods in a community; achieving better physical and mental health; promoting community integration, and developing the capacity of organizations to access USDA and other services and resources. In cooperation with the USDA, ORR helps develop community gardens and farmers’ markets.
Preferred Communities Program: This program supports the resettlement agencies of newly arriving refugees by providing them additional resources to help refugees to become self-sufficient and to integrate into their new communities. The program also assists service providers that assist refugees with special needs that require more intensive case management.
Supplemental Services for Recently Arrived Refugees: This program provides additional resources to communities where refugee services are insufficient because of changes in arrival patterns including secondary migrations. Services include: case management; health and mental health services; English as a second language; job placement/employment; life skills workshops; nutrition education; an education program for mothers of pre-school children; after school programs; orientation; interpretation; and translation.
Ethnic Community Self-Help Program: This program provides assistance to refugee ethnic community-based organizations (ECBOs) that address community building and facilitate cultural adjustment and integration of refugees. The program’s purpose is to promote community organizing that builds bridges between newcomer refugee communities and community resources.
Technical Assistance Program: This program provides technical assistance grants to organizations with expertise in specific areas, such as employment, cultural orientation, economic development, and English language training.
Microenterprise Development Program: This program enables refugees to become financially independent by helping them develop capital resources and business expertise to start, expand, or strengthen their own business. The program provides training and technical assistance in business plan development, management, bookkeeping, and marketing to equip refugees with the skills they need to become successful entrepreneurs.
Individual Development Accounts Program: Individual development accounts are matched savings accounts available for the purchase of specific assets. Under the IDA program, the matching funds, together with the refugee’s own savings from his or her employment, are available for one (or more) of the following: home purchase; microenterprise capitalization; post secondary education or training; and in some cases, purchase of an automobile if necessary to maintain or upgrade employment. Upon enrolling in an IDA program, a refugee signs a savings plan agreement, which specifies the savings goal, the match rate, and the amount the refugee will save each month. Refugees also receiving training in navigating the financial system, budgeting, saving, and credit.
Division of Children’s Services
The Division of Children’s Services (DCS) recognizes the importance of providing a safe and appropriate environment for unaccompanied alien children during the interim period between the minor’s transfer into ORR care and reunification with family or other sponsors or removal from the United States by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. DCS strives to provide the best care and placement for unaccompanied alien children (UAC), who are in federal custody by reason of their immigration status, while taking into account the unique nature of each child’s situation in making placement, case management, and release decisions. DCS also oversees the Unaccompanied Refugee Minors (URM) program, which connects refugee minors with appropriate foster care services and benefits when they do not have a parent or a relative available and committed to providing for their long-term care.
Unaccompanied Children’s Services: This program makes and implements placement decisions in the best interests of UAC to ensure that they are in the least restrictive setting possible while in federal custody. The majority of UAC are cared for through a network of state licensed ORR-funded care providers, which provide classroom education, mental and medical health services, case management, and socialization/recreation. ORR/DCS funds programs to provide a continuum of care for children, including foster care, group homes, and residential treatment centers. The division also coordinates a legal access project assuring that these children have information about their legal rights and receive an individual legal screening to assess their chances of legal relief. Finally, ORR/DCS provides family reunification services to facilitate safe and timely placement with family members or other qualified sponsors.
Unaccompanied Refugee Minors Program: This program ensures that eligible unaccompanied minor populations receive the full range of assistance, care, and services available to all foster children in the state by establishing a legal authority to act in place of the child’s unavailable parent(s). Our programs encourage reunification of children with their parents or other appropriate adult relatives through family tracing and coordination with local refugee resettlement agencies. However, if reunification is not possible, each program works to design a case specific permanency plan for each minor or youth in care. Additional services ORR provides include: indirect financial support for housing, food, clothing, medical care, and other necessities; intensive case management by social workers; independent living skills training; educational supports including educational training vouchers; English language training; career/college counseling and training; mental health services; assistance adjusting immigration status; cultural activities; recreational opportunities; support for social integration; cultural and religious preservation.
Anti-Trafficking in Persons Division
The Division of Anti-Trafficking in Persons (ATIP) helps certify victims of a severe form of trafficking in persons, as defined by the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000. These individuals are eligible to receive federally funded benefits and services to the same extent as refugees, and can begin to rebuild their lives in the United States. ATIP is committed to promoting public awareness and assisting in the identification of trafficking victims by educating the public and persons likely to encounter victims. These organizations or persons may include: social services providers; public health officials; legal organizations; as well as ethnic, faith-based, and community organizations.
ATIP is responsible for the following programs:
Victim Identification and Public Awareness
Rescue and Restore Campaign: This program is a public awareness campaign that established Rescue and Restore coalitions in 24 cities, regions, and states. These community action groups are comprised of non-governmental organization leaders, academics, students, law enforcement officials, and other key stakeholders who are committed to addressing the problem of human trafficking in their own communities.
Rescue and Restore Regional Program: This program serves as the focal point for regional public awareness campaign activities and intensification of local outreach to identify victims of human trafficking. Each Rescue and Restore Regional partner oversees and builds the capacity of a local anti-trafficking network, and sub-awards 60 percent of grant funds to local organizations that identify and work with victims. By acting as a focal point for regional anti-trafficking efforts, Rescue and Restore Regional partners encourage a cohesive and collaborative approach in the fight against modern-day slavery.
Assistance for Victims of Human Trafficking
Certifications and Eligibility Letters: HHS is the sole federal agency authorized to certify foreign adult victims of human trafficking. Similarly, it is the sole federal agency authorized to make foreign child victims of human trafficking eligible for assistance. ORR issues all certifications and eligibility letters. Certification grants adult foreign victims of human trafficking access to federal benefits and services to the same extent as refugees. Likewise, eligibility letters grant minor foreign victims of trafficking access to federal benefits and services to the same extent as refugees, including placement in the Unaccompanied Refugee Minors program.
National Human Trafficking Victim Assistance Program: This program provides funding for comprehensive case management services to foreign victims of trafficking and potential victims seeking HHS certification in any location in the United States. The grantees provide case management to assist a victim of trafficking to become certified, and other necessary services after certification, through a network of sub-awardees in locations throughout the country. These grants ensure the provision of case management, referrals, and emergency assistance (such as food, clothing, and shelter) to victims of human trafficking and certain family members. Grantees help victims gain access to housing, employability services, mental health screening and therapy, medical care, and some legal services, enabling victims to live free of violence and exploitation.
National Human Trafficking Resource Center: This program is a national, toll-free hotline for the human trafficking field in the United States. It is reached by calling 1-888-3737-888 or e-mailing NHTRC@PolarisProject.org. The NHTRC operates around the clock to protect victims of human trafficking. It provides callers with a range of comprehensive services including: crisis intervention; urgent and non-urgent referrals; tip reporting; anti-trafficking resources; and technical assistance for the anti-trafficking field and those who wish to get involved. To perform these functions, the NHTRC maintains a national database of organizations and individuals, as well as a library of anti-trafficking resources and materials.
Office of the Director
The Office of the Director responds to overall ORR operations and special projects, including communications and outreach, media relations, and the federal government’s U.S. Repatriation Program. The Budget, Policy, and Data Analysis (BPDA) team is also located within the Office of the Director, and is responsible for the allocation and tracking of funds for refugee cash and medical assistance, as well as state administrative costs; forecasting and executing ORR’s annual budget; developing regulations and legislative proposals; and routinely interpreting policy. BPDA also coordinates preparation of the ORR Annual Report to Congress.
https://www.acf.hhs.gov/office-of-refugee-resettlement
November 23rd, 2014 @ 5:49 pm
[…] troubled Obama’s peace like a gadfly since he came into office. Last night (22 November) she released the result of some obvious research. She looked for the executive order to let those illegal aliens […]
November 24th, 2014 @ 1:52 pm
[…] troubled Obama’s peace like a gadfly since he came into office. Last night (22 November) she released the result of some obvious research. She looked for the executive order to let those illegal […]
December 8th, 2014 @ 12:41 am
[…] have determined that America has a surplus — and not a shortage — of high-tech workers." Press release: there is no executive order to shield 5 million illegals and no executive order to gr… "On 11.20.2014 Barack Obama announced an executive order to grant 28 month reprieve from […]
December 8th, 2014 @ 12:43 am
[…] have determined that America has a surplus — and not a shortage — of high-tech workers." Press release: there is no executive order to shield 5 million illegals and no executive order to gr… "On 11.20.2014 Barack Obama announced an executive order to grant 28 month reprieve from […]
December 8th, 2014 @ 4:09 pm
[…] month (November 22), Dr. Orly Taitz released a statement few believed at the time. She said Barack Obama never actually issued or signed any executive order […]
December 22nd, 2014 @ 4:00 pm
Lovely site, it loads really quick and looks very cool.
December 24th, 2014 @ 4:12 am
I returned from linkedin well done on an outstanding social media campaign
December 24th, 2014 @ 6:47 pm
We have a question with the post, where can i speak to the author?
December 24th, 2014 @ 9:47 pm
wonderful usage of words within the article, it really did help
when i was reading
January 16th, 2015 @ 12:34 pm
Excellent short article, i did read it twice so sorry for that,
i’ve passed it on to my mates, so hopefully they should get pleasure
from it as well.
January 17th, 2015 @ 5:40 pm
We’re a bunch of volunteers annd opening a brand new
scheme in our community. Youur web ite offered us with helpful info to work on. You have performed an impressive
process andd our whole group might be grateful to you.
March 2nd, 2015 @ 9:37 pm
[…] that America has a surplus — and not a shortage — of high-tech workers.” Press release: there is no executive order to shield 5 million illegals and no executive order to gr… “On 11.20.2014 Barack Obama announced an executive order to grant 28 month reprieve from […]