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Supreme Court agrees with Trump administration, says some refugees can be barred for now

September 13, 2017 by  
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The Supreme Court agreed with the Trump administration Tuesday and put on hold a lower court decision that would have allowed more refugees to enter the country.

The court issued a one-paragraph statement granting the administration’s request for a stay of the latest legal maneuvering involving the president’s executive order on immigration. There were no recorded dissents to the decision..

At issue is whether the president can block a group of about 24,000 refugees, who have assurances from sponsors, from entering the United States. A panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit had interpreted a Supreme Court directive this summer to mean that they should be allowed in, but the government objected.

It is part of a complicated legal battle that began last January when President Trump issued his first version of the ban. The Supreme Court is scheduled to consider the merits of his actions at a hearing Oct. 10.

The current case grows out of a Supreme Court decision last June that approved a limited version of a presidential order that temporarily blocked refugees and citizens of six majority-Muslim countries.

The justices said Trump could impose a limited version of the measure, but not on those with a “bona fide” connection to the United States, such as having family members here, a job or a place in a U.S. university.

It is the interpretation of a “bona fide” connection to the United States that is being debated.

The government initially declined to include grandparents and other extended family members as meeting that standard, as well as refugees with formal assurances. A federal district judge said the government’s reading was too broad, and stopped it.

The Supreme Court largely upheld that ruling in July, though it put on hold the portion dealing with refugees.

Last week, a federal appeals court panel weighed in, deciding that the administration could block neither grandparents nor refugees with assurances.

The Justice Department this week asked the Supreme Court to step in again — though only to block refugees, not grandparents and other extended family members. Even those refugees with formal assurances from a resettlement agency lack the sort of connection that should exempt them from the ban, the Justice Department argued in its new filing to the Supreme Court.

“The absence of a formal connection between a resettlement agency and a refugee subject to an assurance stands in stark contrast to the sort of relationships this court identified as sufficient in its June 26 stay ruling,” Acting Solicitor General Jeffrey B. Wall wrote in his filing.

“Unlike students who have been admitted to study at an American university, workers who have accepted jobs at an American company, and lecturers who come to speak to an American audience, refugees do not have any free-standing connection to resettlement agencies, separate and apart from the refugee-admissions process itself, by virtue of the agencies’ assurance agreement with the government,” the filing said.

In response, the state of Hawaii, which is challenging the travel ban, told the Supreme Court that the government’s argument made no sense.

“Refugees with formal assurances are the category of foreign nationals least likely to implicate the national security rationales the government has pointed to in the past,” wrote Washington lawyer Neal Katyal, who is representing Hawaii.

“By the government’s own admission, these refugees have already been approved by the Department of Homeland Security. It is therefore exceedingly unlikely that they represent a security threat.”

Time is beginning to become a factor in the broader fight over Trump’s travel ban.

The measure was supposed to have been temporary — lasting 90 days for citizens of the six affected countries, and 120 days for refugees. If the measure is considered to have taken effect when the Supreme Court allowed partial implementation, the 90 days will have passed by the time the justices hear arguments Oct. 10, and the 120 days are very likely to have passed by the time they issue a decision.

Some deadlines for reports have also seemingly passed. The Department of Homeland Security secretary was — within 20 days of the order taking effect — to have given Trump the results of a worldwide review determining what information was necessary from other countries to vet travelers. The countries that weren’t supplying adequate information were then to be given 50 days to begin doing so, and after that, top U.S. officials were to give Trump a list of countries recommended for inclusion in a more permanent travel ban.

A Homeland Security spokesman said a report was delivered to the White House in early July on the results of the review, and officials then went about assessing each country on the information it provided

He said Homeland Security officials were “evaluating the information received and will provide a report to the president in the coming weeks.”

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Irma Updates: A Bruised Southeast Shows Signs of Resilience

September 13, 2017 by  
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“I noticed all the water around us had a sheen,” Mr. Lutzen said. “I need a tetanus shot and a booster Hep A shot, probably.”

Mayor Lenny Curry said 356 people were rescued in total on Monday, and Randy Wyse, the president of the Jacksonville Association of Firefighters, said 15 patients were evacuated from St. Vincent’s Medical Center after the water began to rise.

At one point, Mr. Lutzen realized Sherwood’s, an old watering hole owned by his family, had flooded up to the tabletops. On Tuesday, he was back there in a headlamp and a soaked shirt. A sign urging patrons to “buy the bar a round of cheer” swayed in the breeze of a fan drying the place out.

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Jacksonville, which has a metropolitan area of 1.4 million people, is built up right along the St. Johns River, leaving it with little natural shoreline that to help absorb floodwater. When storm drains get clogged, Mr. Lutzen said, “it’s like a bathtub with a plug in.”.

Georgia was not spared even as the storm weakened

“This is a different kind of natural disaster,” Gov. Nathan Deal of Georgia said on Tuesday. ”We have not had one like this in the state of Georgia for a very long time.”

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“This is one where the entire state of Georgia has been affected by this hurricane-slash-tropical storm, and as a result of that, recovery is going to be a little more slow.”

The state lifted an evacuation order that had been in effect for coastal areas east of Interstate 95 after inspections confirmed the bridges there were safe to cross.

Homer Bryson, the director of the Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency, said that fuel shortages were being reported throughout the state.

Officials with the state’s two largest electric utilities reported that at least 1.2 million customers were without power on Tuesday.

“This has been a path of destruction, not only through Florida but also all of Georgia,” said Paul Bowers, the president and chief executive of Georgia Power.

A SWAT vehicle was used to rescue a stroke victim in Miami

Mayor Tomás Regalado of Miami shared an account of an extraordinary rescue.

As the storm hit the city, 911 operators received a call requesting help for a woman who had had a stroke in the Flagami neighborhood, on the city’s west side, Mr. Regalado said at a news conference on Tuesday. But with winds exceeding 45 miles per hour, the emergency response teams were prohibited from going out.

“A decision was made by fire and police to use an armored car of the SWAT team to pick up the firefighters at the station; pick up the lady at the house, in the middle of the storm; and take the lady to the hospital,” Mr. Regalado said. “So SWAT was used to save the life of a City of Miami resident.”

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“I think it’s important that one life mattered,” he added, saying that such a rescue had never been executed before.

The Miami region was shifting toward recovery, with some trash pickups and flights out of Miami International Airport resuming and public transit expected to come back online throughout the week.

Local tap water was safe to drink, Mayor Carlos Gimenez of Miami-Dade County said. But with temperatures in the mid-80s and little air conditioning to speak of, Mr. Gimenez warned residents against the temptation of ocean swimming, saying it would take several more days to assess the safety of local waters.

In Charleston, S.C., ‘things are a lot better today than yesterday,’ the mayor said

In Charleston and the surrounding coastal communities, residents were taking stock of a storm and flooding that exceeded local expectations. Irma’s effects coincided with high tide there, causing some of the worst flooding since Hurricane Hugo, which devastated the area in 1989.

Still, “things are a lot better today than yesterday,” Mayor John Tecklenburg said. “I expect us to be fully back in business tomorrow. There’s a certain level of control you can have, but at some point you’ve got to realize, water is a powerful force. That means tough decisions on how high you build, how strong you build and where you can build.”

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