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PRESS CONTACT
REBECCA FARMER
39 DRUMM STREET
SAN FRANCISCO
CA 94111
415.621.2493
Email

“Emergency response policies and practices should prioritize humanitarian principles—this is essential in times of crisis,” said Valerie Small Navarro, Senior Legislative Advocate, ACLU California Affiliates. “We applaud the state legislature and the governor in decisively fixing this public health and safety problem.”
Supporters of the bill, which included a number of disaster aid organizations, argued that when a disaster strikes in California, everyone should be able to access the assistance they need and for which they are eligible without being subject to arbitrary and unnecessary identification checks. “We supported this bill because it conforms with the same humanitarian principles that guide the Red Cross in providing emergency assistance to as many disaster victims as possible,” said Joe Craver, CEO of the American Red Cross of San Diego & Imperial Counties.
During the San Diego wildfires in the fall of 2007, public employees asked
evacuees to produce proof of identity and proof of residence from an evacuated
area in order to enter the emergency shelter, access emergency food and water,
and speak to a relief worker. As a result, families who had escaped the
fires with only the clothes on their backs were turned away, even though there
was no legal requirement that they present proof of identity or residence in
order to establish eligibility for emergency shelter and
assistance.
When people flee their homes from a wildfire, flood, or
mudslide, their first concern is to immediately get themselves and their
families to safety. Unfortunately, there is little time for packing or
grabbing important documents before evacuating a threatened area. The
elderly, people with disabilities, the homeless, immigrants and those who are
low-income are the least likely to possess and carry personal documents, and are
the most likely to be affected by unnecessary document checks during a
disaster.
“It is critical that immigrant populations and others feel confident that when a disaster strikes they, just like all other residents of our state, can secure the help they and their families so urgently need,” said Reshma Shamasunder, Executive Director of the California Immigrant Policy Center.
We applaud the Governor for signing AB 2327 to ensure that our emergency response is effective and compassionate and focuses on the safety and well-being of all Californians.
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Download the Fall 2011 ACLU of Northern California Newsletter and read about our latest events and initiatives.

| • | A New Frontier of Reproductive Freedom for U.S. Women |
| • | Oakland Gang Injunction is a False Solution |
| • | As Death Penalty Cases Fade, L.A. County Pays to Buck the Trend |
