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Nora Sandigo, ‘the Great Mother’ Who Offers Refuge To Migrant Families In The United States

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An hour’s drive from Miami Beach, on the way to the suburb of Homestead, is the headquarters of the Nora Sandigo Children Foundation, founded by Nora Sandigo. Known as “La Gran Madre” — “the great mother” — Sandigo is a local legend. Since opening her foundation in 2006, she’s been the legal guardian to 2,373 children, whose parents have been deported or are at risk of being detained by immigration authorities. This number is constantly changing as the children reach adulthood.

Sandigo doesn’t adopt the kids — their mothers and fathers retain parental rights — but she takes responsibility for decisions regarding their education, health, and upbringing, accepting guardianship of them. She cares for these youths in the absence of their parents, preventing them from being left at the mercy of the state.

With the intensification of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations following Donald Trump’s return to office, as well as the fear among many undocumented immigrants about being detained, the number of applications that Sandigo receives has increased considerably. The vast majority come from mothers who fear for their children’s future. In the last 18 months alone, Sandigo has become the legal guardian of 472 minors, bringing the total number of children currently under her care to around 700.

The organization’s headquarters is a nine-room house that also serves as a senior care center (also run by Sandigo), with profits going to fund the Nora Sandigo Children Foundation. On a Wednesday in early December, after 2:00 p.m., Sandigo arrives at the house. She’s dressed entirely in black, wearing comfortable clothes and white sneakers, which match her nails. Her long, dark hair is loose. She hasn’t eaten yet, despite having gotten up at 6:00 a.m. “I live on coffee,” she jokes.

The voice of this 60-year-old woman of Nicaraguan origin is warm and gentle. She recounts spending the morning working from home, where migrants also show up, seeking her assistance. She says that her doors are always open, without any set hours. “I have a home and I also don’t, you understand? I’m not like those people who closely guard their privacy, who only find peace when they’re alone,” she emphasizes. “My life is one of service.”

Sandigo, the divorced mother of two daughters, now 27 and 28 years old, has also raised several other children in her home. She took care of some of them from young ages until they went to college, during the years that their parents were unable to care for them due to their precarious immigration status. At one point, she cared for six children under the same roof.

Nora Sándigo

Helping those in need 24/7

“I’m not going out to make deliveries today. Three families have told me they’re coming to see me,” Sandigo says. Fear is causing more and more migrants to avoid leaving their homes. The foundation’s work revolves around this dual approach: welcoming families who come to their center, while visiting the homes of those who don’t dare to leave. However, Sandigo’s way of working doesn’t follow any structure or methodology. Rather, it flows organically, according to the needs of the moment. “Every day is different,” she sighs.

Sometimes, she distributes bags of food with basic necessities (for Thanksgiving, she included turkeys), or she organizes events where in addition to food she gives away school supplies. She dedicates the rest of her time to answering emails and returning phone calls, while managing the open cases of the migrants who come to her for help. She has years of experience stopping deportations, filing writs of habeas corpus and tracking down lawyers.

Her phone never stops ringing. She has two cell phones, which she leaves on the table next to her computer. She moves back and forth between conversations and text messages; sometimes, she answers a phone to apologize, promising to call back later.

A member of one of the families calls her four times. Despite having visited the foundation several times, she got lost while driving there. It’s Marisol, a 31-year-old Guatemalan woman (she asks that her real name not be used, as she’s undocumented). She arrives with her two children, aged four and 11, who are dressed in their school uniforms. They slowly settle down on the sofa; the children, shy, remain still. Their father was arrested two months ago and sent to a migrant detention center in Texas. The younger boy thinks that his dad is visiting his grandmother.

“He calls me every day to tell me that he’s okay, not to worry about him and to focus on the children,” the woman shrugs. She came to visit Sandigo to see if she’s heard from her husband’s lawyer. He has a court date next Monday and, by then, his lawyer must present a document certifying that Sandigo is the detainee’s U.S. sponsor… an essential requirement for his release.

Marisol’s husband has no criminal record. He’s also a Dreamer, protected under the DACA program, which was created in 2012 for those who arrived in the country as minors. However, while the program authorizes them to live and work in the U.S., it doesn’t grant them legal status. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) maintains that Dreamers “are not automatically protected from deportation.” Even so, Sandigo believes that the situation is resolvable: she thinks that, with sponsorship and the payment of bail (which ranges from $1,000 to $20,000, depending on the case), Marisol’s husband will be able to get out of jail.

But Marisol remains worried. “How are we going to get the money that the lawyer is asking for? I think [he’s] taking advantage of our desperation. At first, he asked for $1,500… [but] when he found out Nora was going to help me, he raised it to $8,000,” she laments. Marisol works in a plant nursery and barely earns enough to pay the rent.

Sandigo reassures the woman. She has the tenacity and confidence of someone who has handled worse situations. In 2022, she helped a family that arrived in the U.S. with two children. The mother stayed with the baby in Florida, the father was deported to Guatemala, while the nine-year-old daughter was sent to a center in Texas and disappeared. Sandigo “moved heaven and earth” to find her. After reporting the girl’s disappearance, someone called anonymously to report where she was being held, which allowed Sandigo’s lawyers to get her returned to Florida, to be with her mother and brother.

Sandigo — who cannot bear the separation of families — was warned that it would be impossible to bring the father back from Guatemala. But she didn’t give up: she argued that he had been deported without being afforded the right to a fair defense and that he should be returned to the same place where the process began. On December 24 of that same year, the authorities accepted the appeal and returned the father to Florida.

For the Nicaraguan-American woman, who is deeply religious, the fact that the family was reunited on such a significant day in the Christian calendar is a divine sign. “This [work] has to continue. It’s perfect because it’s spiritual, not material,” she affirms.

Separated families and unaccompanied children

The other woman who comes to the center needs food. Ingrid, who also prefers to keep her real name private, arrives unhurriedly and sits down on the sofa, as if she were at home. She has known Sandigo since 2017, when her husband was deported and she was left alone with their children, who, at the time, were aged two, 11 and 15. The Guatemalan family arrived in the U.S. with political asylum, but when they moved, they missed a notification that required them to appear in court. Since then, they’ve had an arrest warrant out for them.

“I consulted with four lawyers about the case and they all told me there’s nothing that can be done,” Ingrid explains. When asked if she’s considering going somewhere else to avoid being arrested and having to leave her children alone, she replies, “Where would I go? If [they’re going to take me, that’s the way it is],” she shrugs, prepared to take the risk. She believes that, if she’s arrested, they’ll let her youngest daughter (now 10) go with her.

“If they separate us, she’ll die. And I’ll die, too,” she affirms, not considering the possibility of being arrested any day on her way to work, which is what happened to her husband. Her case exemplifies how easily an American child can end up all alone in a matter of hours… even if their parents are still alive.

For now, the families Sandigo is in contact with have only had one parent arrested or deported, meaning that the remaining parent can still care for the children (most of whom were born in the United States). “It’s just pure chance that only one parent was arrested. If they found both of them at the same time, do you think ICE would have any compassion for the children?” Sandigo points out. “What’s happening is diabolical, cruel, callous, inhumane.”

If both parents are taken, the children will remain in her custody. But it’s not just about how many children Sandigo can take in. Rather, it’s about how many minors the U.S. immigration system can separate from their parents.

As of the end of November, more than 65,700 people were in ICE custody at migrant detention centers across the country. And, despite Trump’s claim that, in his crusade against migrants, he’s targeting “the worst of the worst,” 73% of the detainees had no criminal records.

Sandigo points out that the government’s narrative is influencing ordinary people, who are becoming less compassionate and more reluctant to help. “Last year, we received more support from the community. We just had to post on Facebook and we received donations. But now, the dynamic has changed,” she explains. She adds that, sometimes, when families at risk call her to ask if she has food, she has nothing to give them. The foundation is sustained by donations from churches, volunteers and local businesses, as well as by Sandigo’s own resources. “My intention in speaking to the media is to contribute to a greater sense of humanity in the face of what’s happening, to reach people’s hearts.”

Marisol’s husband is already in the process of being deported. The lawyer handling his case refused to accept payment in installments and demanded an $8,000 deposit on Monday, just hours before the court hearing. The Guatemalan woman didn’t have the money, so the lawyer abandoned the case.

“This is an example of the monstrosity we’re experiencing,” Sandigo says, with frustration in her voice. “The lawyer only had to submit my sponsorship paperwork to free that man. It was an easy case, but people have no compassion.”

For those who wish to contribute to the cause, donations can be made

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Ataque Estados Unidos a Venezuela

Delcy Rodríguez: “Venezuela Tiene Derecho A Tener Relaciones Con Rusia, China, Irán Y Cuba”

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Delcy Rodríguez, presidenta encargada de Venezuela, afirmó este jueves que “la agresión invasora” llevada a cabo por Estados Unidos contra el país el pasado 3 de enero constituye “una mancha en la relación entre ambas naciones”, y agregó que, en el contexto político actual, su gobierno “ha decidido escoger la vía diplomática” para dirimir el conflicto. “Tenemos derecho a tener relaciones diplomáticas con China, con Rusia, con Irán, con Cuba, con todos los pueblos del mundo. También con los Estados Unidos. Somos una nación soberana”, añadió.

Rodríguez hizo estas afirmaciones durante la presentación anual de la gestión del Ejecutivo ante el Parlamento, un ritual constitucional que se celebra a comienzos de cada año en el Palacio Federal Legislativo. A la sesión han acudido varios embajadores extranjeros, gobernadores y autoridades del chavismo.

La presidenta encargada, que en sus últimas declaraciones ha señalado que el país se abre a un “nuevo momento político”, dedicó buena parte de su intervención a honrar a Nicolás Maduro y Cilia Flores, capturados durante la operación estadounidense del 3 de enero, y a elevar la moral de la militancia revolucionaria tras el ataque. Rodríguez se comprometió nuevamente con la lealtad a los principios fundamentales del chavismo. “Este trabajo es del presidente Maduro, afirmó al presentar el documento.

Rodríguez prometió trabajar por la liberación de Maduro y Flores y pidió “un minuto de aplausos” para los soldados venezolanos y cubanos que murieron en los enfrentamientos con tropas estadounidenses. “No le tengamos miedo a la contradicción planteada. Vamos a enfrentarla”, dijo en referencia a los acuerdos petroleros con Estados Unidos anunciados por el propio Donald Trump tras la detención de la pareja presidencial.

Tanto Delcy Rodríguez como su hermano Jorge Rodríguez, presidente del Parlamento, emplearon un tono conciliador hacia la oposición. Ambos invocaron la importancia de fomentar la convivencia política y asumieron, al menos de forma parcial, la responsabilidad de trabajar para consolidar un mejor clima en el país.

Rodríguez advirtió a la oposición: “No confundan las medidas sustitutivas tomadas con algunas personas judicializadas y nuestro interés en bajarle la presión al clima político con debilidad. No se equivoquen con esto. Es hora de desterrar el extremismo fascista. Vamos a rectificar todos”. Rodríguez agregó además: “No es que la presidenta encargada tenga miedo porque esté amenazada. No. Venezuela entera está amenazada y, con la soberanía por delante, daremos la batalla diplomática”.

La presidenta encargada criticó los fundamentos históricos de la diplomacia estadounidense y comentó que, históricamente, la nación norteamericana ha maniobrado e intrigado abiertamente para ampliar su radio de influencia en América Latina, socavar su independencia y traficar con sus recursos naturales. “La doctrina Monroe y el bolivarianismo que nosotros postulamos y defendemos son proyectos completamente opuestos, son antítesis”, afirmó.

En una alusión directa a las recientes conversaciones entre Donald Trump y la líder de la oposición venezolana, María Corina Machado, Rodríguez comentó: “Si algún día me tocara ir como presidenta encargada a Washington, lo haré con dignidad, de pie, caminando con la frente en alto y con la bandera tricolor. Será de pie, nunca será arrastrándome”.

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The EPA Will No Longer Calculate The Lives Saved Thanks To Air Pollution Restrictions

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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced a significant shift in how it assesses air pollution standards. From now on, the agency will still recognize and describe the impacts of pollution on human health — such as premature deaths avoided or reduced respiratory disease — but those effects will no longer be translated into economic figures in cost-benefit analyses. Instead, regulatory assessments will focus on the costs businesses face in complying with environmental standards.

The decision affects regulations on fine particulate matter (PM₂.₅) and ground-level ozone, two of the most dangerous and widespread pollutants in the country, and has provoked a strong reaction from public health experts, scientists, and environmental organizations.

The change, initially revealed by The New York Times and confirmed in recent regulatory documents, is part of the approach to environmental policy under the Donald Trump administration, characterized by prioritizing industrial interests and paying less attention to various regulations designed to protect public health and the environment.

EPA officials argue that the modification does not imply ignoring the effects of pollution, but rather recognizing the limitations of the economic models used to date. In official communications, the agency has insisted that “not monetizing does not equate to not considering or valuing the impact on human health.” EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said the agency will still take into account lives saved when setting pollution limits, but without assigning a dollar value to them.

For decades, monetizing health benefits was a pillar of the EPA’s regulatory approach. By estimating the economic value of avoided hospitalizations, workdays not lost, and premature deaths prevented, the agency was able to demonstrate that air quality standards generated net benefits of billions of dollars, even when the costs to industry were high.

Under the Biden administration, for example, the EPA calculated that tightening limits on PM₂.₅ could prevent up to 4,500 premature deaths and 290,000 lost workdays by 2032. According to those estimates, for every dollar invested in reducing this pollutant, the health benefits could reach up to $77.

The current administration believes that these figures convey a false sense of accuracy. In a recent economic impact analysis, the EPA argued that its previous assessments gave the public excessive confidence in the monetized benefits of reducing PM₂.₅ and ozone, despite scientific uncertainties, especially in a context of overall declining emissions.

To “correct this error,” the document states, the agency will stop monetizing the benefits associated with these pollutants until it has models that it considers more reliable.

Concerns intensified following the publication of a new standard on nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions from gas turbines in power plants. Although these pollutants contribute to the formation of smog and fine particles associated with heart and lung disease, the final version of the rule is less stringent than the one proposed during the Biden administration and, in some cases, weakens protections that have been in place for two decades. The analysis accompanying the rule does not include any economic assessment of the health benefits of reducing pollution.

Warnings

Scientists and public health experts emphasize that the effects of PM₂.₅ and ozone are well documented. Fine particles can penetrate deep into the lungs and bloodstream, increasing the risk of asthma, cardiovascular disease, lung cancer, and premature death. Recent studies also link exposure to PM₂.₅ with low birth weight and other health problems.

Although air quality in the United States has improved since the passage of the Clean Air Act in 1970, pockets of pollution persist, especially in low-income and minority communities, which already bear disproportionate burdens of disease.

Some experts note that the legal impact of the change remains to be seen. The Clean Air Act requires that national air quality standards be based on public health criteria, not economic costs. Although the EPA will continue to quantify health impacts, eliminating their monetary translation could lead to more litigation and leave courts with incomplete assessments.

Concerns have also arisen internationally. For years, EPA methods have served as a global benchmark for assessing the costs and benefits of air pollution. Abandoning the monetization of health impacts, experts warn, could weaken environmental standards in other countries.

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Caracas

Trump Meets With María Corina Machado Just Hours After Praising Delcy Rodríguez

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Twelve days after the U.S. military operation that captured Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro and his wife, and just days after U.S. President Donald Trump dashed the hopes of opposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner María Corina Machado, the two met at the White House on Thursday.

The meeting between Trump and Machado comes just hours after the U.S. president told reporters that Chavista leader and interim president, Delcy Rodríguez, was a “terrific person.” “She’s somebody that we’ve worked with very well,” said Trump. Following Maduro’s arrest, the former vice president took charge of Venezuela with the blessing of the White House.

In the hours following the surprise attack that ended with Maduro and his wife, Cecilia Flores, sitting in the dock of a federal court in New York accused of crimes of “narco-terrorism,” conspiracy and trafficking in cocaine and weapons, Trump made it clear that he does not consider Machado to be the right person to lead a transition in Venezuela — a transition in which Trump himself has reserved a central role.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Thursday that Trump was “looking forward” to meeting Machado, who she described as “a remarkable and brave voice for many of the people of Venezuela.” But when asked shortly afterward whether Trump still believes Machado is not the right person to lead Venezuela’s political transition because she lacks the “support and respect” of the population, Leavitt replied: “It was a realistic assessment […] and at this moment in time, his opinion on that matter has not changed.”

That was the big question surrounding Machado’s visit: will she be able to assert the opposition’s role in Washington’s plans to help steer the South American country and take charge of its oil? But the meeting, which was over in just two hours, was a discreet, low‑profile encounter. Leavitt’s statement that Trump’s view “has not changed” was another cold dose of reality.

Leavitt also responded to press questions about Trump administration contacts with Delcy Rodríguez. She said that Trump spoke to Rodríguez this week, and that Secretary of State Marco Rubio and other officials “have been in constant communication” with her and other members of the interim government in Venezuela.

“They have been extremely cooperative. They have thus far met all of the demands and requests of the United States and of the president. And I think you have all seen that play out,” Leavitt said. “We obviously had a $500 million energy deal that was struck in large part because of the cooperation from Ms. Rodríguez. The president likes what he’s seeing and we’ll expect that cooperation to continue.”

Since Maduro’s fall, Machado has tried to put on a brave face about Trump’s rebuffs and has worked to make this Thursday’s meeting happen, on which much was at stake: she needed to convince the U.S. president that it was not a good idea to allow Rodríguez, her great enemy, to remain in power. For months, Machado advocated for a military intervention that finally came on January 3 — only to be disappointed that the U.S. had not relied on her as much as she had expected.

Machado even showed herself willing to share the Nobel Peace Prize she received in Oslo last December with Trump, even though the Nobel Committee has already warned both of them that it is not transferable. The U.S. president is obsessed with the idea that he deserves that award, believing he has ended “eight or nine wars,” although that belief is another indication of his fraught relationship with the truth. After the meeting, Machado told the press that she had indeed “presented” the prize to Trump, who rarely even calls her by name when speaking about the Venezuelan opposition leader. “I presented the president of the United States the medal of the Nobel Peace Prize,” Machado told journalists, calling it “a recognition for his unique commitment with our freedom.”

Trump’s decision to sideline Machado gives the impression that the White House has chosen to turn the page on the results of Venezuela’s 2024 presidential election, which international reports say was broadly won by Edmundo González Urrutia, Machado’s candidate (she was unable to run because she was disqualified). Maduro refused to acknowledge that defeat.

At this point, it’s unclear whether the United States plans to call new elections in Venezuela, or when or how that might take place. All of these questions will certainly be on the table this Thursday at the White House.

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