Summary: The Unaccompanied Children Program (UCP) protects the rights of young immigrants to make informed decisions about their lives. Annually, we defend and counsel thousands of young people facing family separation, government detention, and deportation. UCP serves unaccompanied non-citizen youth who are currently detained by the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) in juvenile facilities in the Lower Hudson Valley, Long Island, and New York City, as well as youth who have left these facilities and reside in New York City.
We are committed to ensuring that non-citizen youth have access to the information and support they need to fully exercise their rights and to meaningfully participate in their own removal defense. Each year, we provide robust legal representation to hundreds of minors facing removal and give legal information to thousands of minors in federal immigration custody. Outside the courtroom, UCP provides educational and integration opportunities for non-citizen youth, and we connect young people with supportive social services in the communities where they live.
The Supervising Attorney provides legal services to young people who are facing removal proceedings and who are, or have been, living under the custody of ORR. The position includes extensive contact with youth who have suffered abuse, abandonment, neglect, or other trauma, and it requires significant time in state court, immigration court, and the local asylum offices in the New York City area. Travel to the ORR-run facilities may be required.
Essential Duties and Responsibilities include the following. Other duties may be assigned.
- Supervise staff in the provision of child-centered, trauma-informed, and culturally competent legal services to ORR-involved unaccompanied non-citizen minors.
- Train and mentor attorneys, paralegals, and law graduates in immigration and family law, support more experienced attorneys on complex representation, assign new cases in a manner that promotes staff wellbeing and longevity, and identify and implement best practices across the legal practice.
- Maintain a sensible caseload, in light of and secondary to supervisory duties, that will include screening, advising, and representing children before EOIR, USCIS, and state and federal courts.
- Ensure that staff provide ORR-involved young people with the information and advice they need to make informed decisions regarding their immigration matters, and oversee staff’s work product on clients’ applications for legal relief.
- Use the client management database and SharePoint to timely and accurately maintain and update records. This may include notes from any meetings with youth, information of all correspondence received for or from stakeholders, communications regarding a client’s matter, tracking deadlines and event reminders, and uploading other documents or information as needed.