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FEBRUARY 2025

The Long Path Forward on Immigration

In school, I was taught that the U.S. was a country built by immigrants and descendants of immigrants. I and many of my fellow students knew the final words of Emma Lazarus’s poem The New Colossus by heart:

Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!

These words had meaning for us since, like me, several of my friends were also great-grandchildren or grandchildren of immigrants, and several of their ancestors had started local businesses in our small Ohio town. In the 1950s and 1960s, few new immigrants settled in our town, but those that did were welcomed.

During the past two decades, immigrants have been the primary driver of demographic growth in the U.S. We will continue to need immigration as the number of U.S.-born working-age adults decreases as the baby boom generation retires.

We will face many challenges during the next four years, but we Unitarian Universalists must keep the faith. We must affirm that all people are sacred beings with inherent dignity and worthiness and work to be a diverse, multicultural, beloved community where all thrive.

Therefore, we Unitarian Universalists need to join with other faith-based groups in a long-term effort to change the overall narrative about immigrants. We must stay focused on our long-range goal of a comprehensive update of our immigration system that reflects our values.

[The Unabridged Version]

 
Steve Eckstrand
Co-convener, UUSJ Immigration Team
Over 12 million immigrants entered the United States through Ellis Island between 1892 and 1954. At its peak in 1907, more than 1 million immigrants passed through Ellis Island. No passports or visas were needed to enter the U.S. through Ellis Island. Only about 2% of immigrants who arrived were excluded, and most immigrants were processed in just a few hours. It is estimated that 40% of all U.S. citizens have at least one ancestor who entered through Ellis Island.
 

Mutual Care Highlight

Friend, please note:

  • We will split collections with the California wildfire victims via the UUA's Disaster Relief Fund until Friday, February 14th, 2025
  • Consider making a donation if you can, we want to nudge our gift up a bit and aim to raise $1,500 more to add to the pot

Friend, we heard from so many that you:

  • Appreciated Representative Chu's comments, and articulation of what she was doing, and her plans.
  • Heard how she is doing what she can within the political sphere.
  • Valued her work putting UU values into practice in difficult times.
  • Agreed elected officers should hear from us regardless of their party -- that we need to pressure them to do the right thing.

Events

 
 
Witness
White House Interfaith Public Action and Prayer Vigil 

Tuesday, February 4
12:00pm ET
Lafayette Square, Washington DC
(no RSVP–just come and show solidarity)

Faith leaders, humanitarian organizations, refugees (members of Congress), and resettlement organizations will hold a public action and vigil in Lafayette Square in front of the White House opposing the Trump administration’s Executive Order suspending the refugee resettlement program indefinitely. Faith leaders will pray for our Executive branch leaders to find compassion and mercy. Humanitarian organizations, refugees, and resettlement agencies will speak to the direct impact on the refugee programs. COSPONSORS: Interfaith Immigration Coalition (IIC), Refugee Congress USA. UUSJ is an IIC member.

 
The Revolution Will Be Streamed: Approaches to Media in a World in Crisis
Thursday, February 6
7:00pm ET • 6:00pm CT • 5:00pm MT • 4:00pm PT
RSVP : via Zoom
Partisan bias is widely discussed in news media and news media organizations. However, in addition to partisan bias, news organizations and journalists perpetuate structural biases that perpetuate violent, stereotypical ideas and hopelessness about our world and our role in it. This webinar, presented by Dr. Amy E. Harth, helps news consumers evaluate sources, identify structural biases and what to do about them, and more effectively present their ideas for change. Co-sponsors include BLUU, UURISE, UUCSJ, and Church of the Larger Fellowship.
 
Sacred Earth, Sacred Action: A Climate Science and Spirituality Conference
Saturday, February 8
3:00pm ET • 2:00pm CT • 1:00pm MT • 12:00pm PT
RSVP : in-person and via live-stream 
In-person at Iliff School of Theology and live-streamed. Explore how elemental wisdom can deepen our resilience in the face of climate challenges and our collective ability to take justice-driven and spiritually-rooted actions. The keynote speaker is Camille Dungy, author, and poet—workshop by Rev. Kelly Dignan , UU Ministry for Earth. 
 

Mass Deportation Know Your Rights Training!
Hosted by the ACLU

Monday, February 10 
4:00pm ET • 3:00pm CT • 2:00pm MT • 1:00pm PT

Thursday, February 20 
8:00pm ET • 7:00pm CT • 6:00pm MT • 5:00pm PT
RSVP: for both dates and more in March

The Trump administration has been gearing up for mass deportations since day one, threatening the safety of millions of families. Join one of the ACLU's Know Your Rights Trainings to learn about your rights and understand how you can protect immigrant communities facing these escalating threats. They will host two monthly trainings; you can select the best date on the event page.

Join the call and learn how to get involved.  RSVP now to keep up the pressure and ensure our neighbors are safe.

Migration, Refugee Resettlement, and Mass Deportation: Moral, Human, and Policy Choices
Hosted by Georgetown University, Initiative on Catholic Social Thought and Public Life

Wednesday, February 12
6:00pm ET • 5:00pm CT • 4:00pm MT • 3:00pm PT
75-minute event
RSVP: in-person or live-streamed

A pledge of “massive deportations” was at the center of President Donald Trump’s 2024 campaign, and steps are already being taken to carry this out in the early days of his administration. The executive orders and other actions taken by the administration pose serious threats to immigrant families and refugees, as well as a pastoral challenge for Catholic and other faith communities and a fundamental choice for the United States.

What are the moral dimensions, human consequences, and policy aspects of these commitments and actions? How should the principles of Catholic social teaching shape a response for people of faith and national and local leaders?

Democracy Leaders' Gathering
Hosted by the UUSJ Democracy Action Team

Wednesday, February 19
7:30pm ET • 6:30pm CT • 5:30pm MT • 4:30pm PT
RSVP Online

The threats to our democracy have shown themselves as the transition to a new administration unfolds. The need for a strong, inclusive, pro-democracy movement is real. Our series will continue to provide guidance and explore what the threats require in response.

Screening and Talk
The Last Battlefront
Quest for the Vote in Washington, D.C.

Tuesday, February 25
7:30pm ET • 6:30pm CT • 5:30pm MT • 4:30pm PT
2hr event: 1 hr screening and 1hr other interactions
RSVP: via Zoom

Join us for a film screening of The Last Battlefront, which tells the important story behind why so many Washington D.C. residents advocate for D.C. Statehood. Talk by Producer Anna Reid Jhirad and Activist Anne Anderson.

Washington, D.C., is one of the only capitals in the world where its citizens have no representation in the national legislature and where Congress and federal authorities routinely intrude on the district's local government. The film looks at four turning points in the history of Washington, D.C., to understand how this happened and the struggles of D.C. residents to restore their fundamental rights of self-government that other Americans enjoy.

Featured Actions

 
Tell Congress:
End violation of sensitive locations and protected areas

As a matter of moral principle, this is very simple: ICE should not be allowed in our schools, hospitals, public demonstrations—and never at our houses of worship! The new administration has selected immigration for its assault on the Constitution, our norms, and our liberties. Many advocates, activists, and clergy fear they are starting with immigrants and will conclude by curtailing the rights and freedoms of everyone. 

On January 20, 2025, the new administration rescinded a Biden administration policy protecting certain areas—such as churches, schools, public demonstrations, and hospitals—from immigration enforcement. The new administration replaced it with an unreleased directive, giving Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents unfettered access to and enforcement power in these spaces. Schools, hospitals, protests, and houses of worship should remain off-limits! ICE and other agencies now charged with round-ups, detentions, and deportations should not be permitted into sensitive locations or protected areas.

Take action: This must end. Faith communities must stand firm against these violations.

 
Tell your Representative in the House:
Preserve easy access to the vote! On the SAVE Act, Vote No!

The federal government should not get in the way of our ability to vote. The Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act would make it harder for millions of eligible Americans to register and vote by requiring strict proof of citizenship, such as a passport or birth certificate, and other documents. Many Americans lack these documents, can not easily or quickly obtain them, and cannot afford the fees for processing such documentation. The SAVE Act is a modern-day poll tax, and it is unnecessary and immoral. The reality of our voting system is virtually no election fraud, a minuscule number of people who vote more than once—a tiny risk compared to a major obstacle to voting.

Extremist lawmakers are championing the SAVE Act and corralling supportive votes on this anti-voter law designed to make it harder to register and vote. The U.S. State Department estimates that a whopping 46.9% of U.S. Citizens did not have a valid passport in FY 2024.

Take action: preserve easy access to the vote.

Tell Congress:
Stop the mass round-ups, detentions, and deportations now!

Families should not be separated and communities torn apart!  As a Unitarian Universalist organization, UUSJ holds that all people have inherent worth and dignity and should be treated with respect and compassion wherever possible. We envision a just, compassionate, and sustainable world community. One where all people can thrive and flourish.

Let’s urge Congress to show mercy and compassion when and where the Executive Branch fails to do so. Congress should move swiftly to protect our workplaces, schools, hospitals, and other sensitive spaces and locations, such as houses of worship—our congregations, churches, and fellowships.

Take action: Stop the mass round-ups, detentions, and deportations will help.

Tell your Senators:
No unqualified or dangerous cabinet nominees should be appointed
The Senate will be voting this week on a number of Cabinet nominees we feel are poorly qualified and dangerous. These include: Kash Patel, Pam Bondi, Tulsi Gabbard, Russell Vought, and Robert Kennedy, Jr. We need all the Democrats and at least four Republicans to vote against these nominees. Please take half an hour to review the materials and call your Senators. Express your feelings and emotions – politely – to elected officials who can do something to prevent these nominees from placement in critical national positions.
Leave a message if no one answers.   Click here for easy to follow instructions .
Tell Congress:
Protection for Dreamers

On January 17, 2025, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans ruled that DACA is unlawful but stayed its decision to allow the ruling to be appealed. DACA folks and families have been living with temporary protection from deportation for 12 years, but now DACA is one step closer to termination! Congress can help Dreamers and other DACA recipients while the courts determine if the U.S. Supreme Court can or will, play a final role.

Take ActionTell Congress it is really time to step up and pass legislation to provide permanent protection for the Dreamers, and other DACA recipients!

 

Equal rights and justice

The UUA and UUSJ have signed the Interfaith Statement of Support for the Equal Rights Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, as did the Universalist Society of San Francisco. 

Ask your Minister to join in their capacity as a leader who represents diverse religious traditions in the United States. Review and join the Petition Statement hereUnder the new administration, this feels very important, it is vital to lift our voices where we can.

NEWS

 

Six UU Ministers defend Dreamers

In a Letter to the Editor: Clergy Says DACA Recipients and Dreamers Deserve ‘A Secure Future,’ River Journal. All those who signed were UUs from New York State. They rooted their  position in the “ancient stories of refuge.”

Can your social justice council or Minister follow their example? Can you emulate their bravery and public stance with your local newspaper or periodical? 

If a letter to the editor feels like a stretch, try submitting a story to “This is Welcome,” a multi-media project by the Interfaith Immigration Coalition (IIC) to showcase incredible stories of welcome from faith communities not heard on mainstream media tied with actionable steps and educational resources from member organizations and partners. See a story by Jim Caldiero at Ellicott City, MD – Channing Memorial Church UU for inspiration.

 
 

Faith leaders respond to Executive Orders

"We Unitarian Universalists disagree with the incoming administration’s approach to immigration. We name and center the threat to our faith, families, freedoms, and futures. We will not denigrate migrants, refugees, or asylees. We will not condone mass deportations. We will not ignore Dreamers and other DACA recipients. We reject the proposed constitutional rollbacks." - Pablo DeJesús, Executive Director of Unitarian Universalists for Social Justice.

See the full quote in the coalition Press Release

Side With Love for 30 Days of Love 2025! 

This annual event offers spiritual nourishment, political grounding, and shared practices of faith and justice over four weeks. These offerings are for individuals, families, religious professionals, partners, and communities who need soulful sustenance for the work of liberation and justice. Find everything on Side With Love.

Defending Our Democracy
Fred Van Deusen, Democracy Action Team Convener (Democracy@uusj.org)

Food for thought

Without accountability or self-correction
The stakes become painfully real. The invisible guardrails of civil service keep us all safe by Ben Raderstorf, Protect Democracy, via Substack

Trans folks are the start of the slide
The Attack on Trans Rights Won’t End There. Once legal rights begin to fall, they fall for everyone, by Adam Serwer, Atlantic. 

The lack of spine is striking
There Is No Resistance. The response to the January 6 pardons shows that the president faces no effective constraints from within his party, by Jonathan Chait, Atlantic

 

Your action makes a difference

The new administration is using chaos and constant crises to reach its authoritarian goals.  There Is a Strategy Behind the Chaos, Atlantic. Their actions are harming everyone: robbing cancer patients of medication and families of food; deporting people who pick our crops and care for our sick; raising prices of goods and harming US workers through proposed tariffs; threatening services to children, seniors, and veterans, and politicizing our civil service.

Why bother standing up to these outrageous and illegal edicts? Because it works! The administration recently issued an order freezing federal loans and grants that supported more than 2,600 federal programs, including job training, scientific research grants, and assistance to low-income families. But people pushed back! They alerted their networks to the dangerous order, called Members of Congress to express outrage, and had lawyers challenge the power grab. The result: a U.S. judge temporarily paused it, and the White House budget office rescinded the order. The fight is not over, but rolling-over is no option.

The point is clear. Our actions can make a difference. The new administration can lose when we fight. They are not invincible, and he is not all-powerful. You CAN help! 

A gilded and unqualified cabinet

The UUSJ Democracy Action Team and other UU groups have been calling Senators of both parties to ask them to “vote no” on unqualified nominees. We were one vote short of stopping Pete Hegseth’s nomination–one vote. One! Our Executive Director has been telling UU advocates “the margins are narrow, so very slim. A handful in the Senate, fewer in the House” and “we have moral pressure we can apply. We need to get used to doing this repeatedly.”

Take action: click here for easy to follow instructions More people are needed in this effort. Let’s fill up their voice mail!

Will this make a difference? We certainly hope so. We certainly think it will help them find their steel. Regardless of whether it does or not, it is still our duty as citizens to let our Members of Congress know how we feel. And we hear repeatedly from Hill staff, and Members of Congress, they need to hear from us. That's what democracy is all about.

Responding with informed action and common sense

UUs report feeling that the new administration's approach to governance is intended to make the electorate fearful, silent, and, therefore, complicit in its draconian policies. Many report concluding "they are starting with immigrants, and will come for others."

Regardless of documentation status, immigrants, trans folks, and other people are becoming fearful of taking their children to school, seeking medical care and services, attending public events, participating in worship, or going to church for pastoral care. Many citizens and immigrants alike, are already experiencing or observing the chilling effect of the new administration's policy framework -- most likely Project 2025.

When aimed at U.S. citizens and residents rather than military combatants, the “shock and awe” strategy, the “anything goes” approach, and the “violate anyone anywhere” mandate suggest a clear through-line from the authoritarian playbook to the new administration’s style and organizing principles. In the view of many volunteers, this conclusion is further substantiated by the firing of FBI Agents, Justice Department attorneys, and Inspector Generals, also reported in the media.

Resources:

Environmental and Climate Justice
To connect with UUSJ about our activities (info@uusj.org)

Interfaith Power & Light - National closes

“After much careful deliberation, the board of Interfaith Power & Light (IPL) National has made the difficult decision to suspend its central office’s operations, effective January 17, 2025.  To be clear, the work of the state affiliates, each its independent entity, continues unabated, and it is from these groups that much of the IPL network’s prodigious output has come over the years and will continue to emerge." See the Press Release.

 

The climate assault near you

House Appropriations Committee Ranking Member Rosa DeLauro (D-CT-03) released the following Statement on Trump Executive Orders that Unilaterally Steal Investments Promised to American Families.

The President’s day one attacks on our climate and health included:

See this Toolkit: Trump Administration Takes Early Action to Advance Project 2025-Aligned Ocean Agenda. It includes an index on Executive Orders and memoranda impacting ocean, climate, and federal science. It also includes links to other resources and messaging on these policies' impact on people’s lives.

The State of the Clean Energy Boom Report: this January 2025 report breaks down investment by sector, state, House Republican districts, disadvantaged communities, and rural communities.

Tell your Legislators to protect Americans from toxic food production practices with Farm Action

Take Action via Farm Action

Our government has propped up an industrial food and farm system that has harmed human health and the environment for far too long. Today, the largest agrochemical corporations have amassed excessive power and profits in this system at the expense of everyone else.

These corporations have used their outsized power to trap farmers in a system dependent on harmful chemical herbicides, pesticides, and synthetic fertilizers and to convince the rest of us that this system is the only way to feed ourselves. They then leverage government subsidies to keep this system in place. But we have the power to fight back and build a food and farm system that prioritizes health over excessive corporate profits. 

Farm Action’s new policy roadmap outlines recommendations for how the new administration can rebuild rural America and support independent farmers and ranchers in feeding their communities rather than further empowering abusive multinational and foreign corporations.

 

Environment and Climate Coverage:

 

Immigration Justice
Steve Eckstrand & Terry Grogan, Immigration Action Team Conveners (Immigration@uusj.org)

Two weeks that felt like two years

By any standard, January 2025 has been a trial, travesty, and tragedy for immigration justice and community stability. Immediately after his inauguration — relying on what UUSJ volunteers feel were fabrications, bluffs, and cruelty — President Trump unleashed a torrent of Executive Orders (EOs) and directives that have reversed decades of progress on legal immigration. Here is a good summary: Trump’s Day 1 Orders Use Fearmongering to Expand His Immigration Authority

The field of battle the new administration has selected for its assault on the constitution, our norms, and our liberties is immigration. Many advocates, activists, and clergy fear they are starting with immigrants and will conclude by curtailing the liberties of everyone.

The new administration began with false claims that undocumented immigrants are responsible for a nonexistent, mythological, surge in crime. The President — relying on his Four Horsemen of the Immigration Apocalypse (Vance, Miller, Noem, and Hohman) — has taken the following actions in blitzkrieg fashion:

  • Violated the Constitution’s 24th Amendment recognition of Birthright Citizenship (this was temporarily stayed by Federal Judge John C. Coughenour, who described it as “blatantly unconstitutional”).
  • Unlawfully impounding funding to support the U.S. Refugee Assistance Program, which stops refugee admissions and resettlement
  • Invoking emergency declarations to weaponize the U.S. military against immigrants
  • Forecasting possible invocation of the Insurrection Act and Alien Enemies Act
  • Recommitting to the harmful detention of immigrants
  • Seeking expansion of expedited removal
  • Expanding harmful local law enforcement entanglement with federal immigration enforcement
  • Seeking to punish sanctuary jurisdictions
  • Threatening to punish individuals who help immigrant communities
  • Possible restoration or expansion of country-based travel bans
  • Separating families and endangering lives by ending parole programs
  • Scrutinizing and threatening Temporary Protected Status designations
  • Complete and total border closure to asylum under what UUSJ volunteers deem racist “invasion” rhetoric
  • Systemic jailing of asylum seekers
  • Reinstatement of the “Remain in Mexico” program
  • Shuttering the CBP One App, leaving asylum seekers stranded
  • Designating gangs as Foreign Terrorist Organizations to undermine asylum claims
  • Declaring that the U.S. will create a 30,000-person detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Trump said that the prison would be used to hold "the worst criminal illegal aliens threatening the American people.”
 

A request for mercy is met with rebuke

In the first national moral response resisting the “shock and awe” approach of the returning President, an approach designed to overwhelm opposition and frighten the many was the courageous stand of Episcopal Bishop Mariann Budde, who reminded the President and Vice President of the real meaning of Christianity during a National Prayer Service following the Inauguration. See video of her full remarks.

After being reminded about mercy and compassion, the President demanded an apology (The Hill)(CNN). 

In reply, Bishop Budde said, "I decided to ask him as gently as I could to have mercy… how dangerous it is to speak of people in these broad categories, and particularly immigrants, as all being criminals or transgender children somehow being dangerous.

 

Resilience in the face of “Shock and Awe”

Another bright spot has been the public statements and rapid legal responses by many groups, which has so far resulted in the stay on the revocation of Birthright Citizenship and a partial, and probably temporary, backing down by the administration of a plan to halt almost all funding for essential elements of our national safety net (e.g., Medicaid, Head Start, Meals on Wheels, etc.).

For example, the Friends (Quakers) have launched a promising lawsuit.

The most prevalent single topic among the executive orders was immigration, as there were multiple orders, many likely illegal, all designed to limit the long-standing rights of immigrants. Take action to:

 

Making Good Trouble is Faithful Defiance

Lots of talk about how to make "Good Trouble" and live "Faithful Defiance." There are a range of options open to congregations, churches or fellowships and their members to react to the new administration's actions and behavior. These include:

  • Holding regular sermons on related topics, focusing on the moral dimension
  • Contacting elected officials (including responding to UUSJ action alerts and Congressional meeting requests), 
  • Writing letters to the editor, 
  • Attending vigils and rallies, 
  • Distributing “know your rights” information to nearby immigrant communities, 
  • Learning your rights as a citizen and taking bystander training
  • Monitoring and reporting (after training ) ICE activities at local facilities,
  • Being available (after training) for rapid response (supporting affected immigrants without physically challenging the officers) to ICE workplace and home visits,
  • Contributing to immigration legal and advocacy groups, including volunteering as an attorney or translator,
  • Reaching out to neighboring immigrant-centered churches and organizations, and
  • Potentially offering short-term “sanctuary” for people afraid of being apprehended for paperwork violations, etc.
  • Making resources available to individuals in a manner that does not require entry into your House of worship

Becoming a "fighting church" can take many forms

UU individuals report their congregations are in discernment on becoming a "fighting church." There are many ways to engage. Everyone should consider what steps they want to take and encourage as we learn more about the harmful actions being taken and what resources are available to help us respond.

Starting questions for discernment:

  • Are members of your congregation or community networks in immediate danger?
  • How might your church respond to immediate danger quickly and with focus?
  • Does your fellowship want to become an activist fellowship?
  • Is your congregation better suited to logistics and planning?
  • Is your church best at organizing financial support?
  • How and with whom in your community can your fellowship partner to cover a broader spectrum of needs?
  • Which local area partners are working to mitigate immediate risks?
  • Where can your UU community plug-in?
  • Are you moving your activist/social justice communications to secure networks?
 

Abbreviated resource list:

Gearing up for the civil society and community care response requires sharing information. See the following collated list of resources, links, and news clippings by UUSJ volunteers.

For more, see the Know Your Rights Community Preparedness Resource list and the Immigrant Legal Protection Resource Guide by the National Partnership for New Americans.

 

Immigration news and analysis:

Our collated list of resources, links, and news clippings has even more news items, here are the highlights:

Economic Justice
To connect with UUSJ about our activities (info@uusj.org)

Freeze what? Impoundment what?

We do not know if the White House will turn the spigot on again. We know the courts have accepted a challenge to the action, and the OMB has back-peddled a bit. 

Given the consequences for human need funding and programs, consider taking the following action with MAZON, which writes, “The unilateral and unlawful freezing of federal aid — resources that Congress has provided — throws support for food security and other anti-poverty programs into jeopardy. While we do not yet know the impact of this policy directive, it is reckless and cruel. It could have devastating consequences for Americans of all walks of life.”

Take action: Urge Congress to Protect Life-Saving Federal Aid.

 
Sizzling:
Policy explainers as chopping blocks

“President Trump wants a massive tax cut and immigration crackdown bill. Now Republicans must decide what to cut to help pay for it,” reports the New York Times in House G.O.P. Floats Medicaid Cuts and More to Finance Trump’s Huge Agenda.

The list of what the GOP is willing to cut was so shocking advocates extracted and saved it to make sure it was kept safe in the event someone tried to delete or hide it. You can review the extracted House Ways and Means Committee list here

Not to be outdone, Politico reported that the House GOP puts Medicaid, ACA, and climate measures on the chopping block with another leaked list. You can review that list from the House Budget Committee here.

$5.5 Trillion in cuts, is a bitter pill to swallow for communities

On the back of these leaks, KFF reports, “Republicans are considering federal deficit reductions of $5.5 trillion, which includes $2.3 trillion cuts in Medicaid, $2.7 trillion cuts in other spending, and $0.5 trillion in new tax revenues,” and “Medicaid cuts of $2.3 trillion account nearly half (46%) of all proposed federal cuts, making it the largest source of spending reductions. $2.3 trillion over 10 years represents nearly one-third (31%) reduction from CBO projected federal Medicaid spending of $7.5 trillion.”

 
 

Tax Policy Content and Clippings:

 
UUSJ is a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.
Contributions are tax-deductible as allowed by law.
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