Frank Sharry

Frank Sharry

Sharry with Jack Dromey
Born Connecticut
Alma mater Princeton University
Organization America's Voice

Frank Sharry is the founder and executive director of America’s Voice, an immigration reform group.[1]

Early life

He was raised in West Hartford, Connecticut by an Italian-American mother and an Irish-American father. He graduated from Princeton University in 1978, majoring in History and American Studies. He was captain of the soccer team his junior and senior year, served as a Resident Advisor his senior year and was active in student protest efforts regarding the role of private and selective eating clubs in college life and university investments in firms operating in a South Africa ruled by apartheid.

After graduation he taught secondary school for a year at the United World College of Southeast Asia in Singapore. He left to work for the American Council for Nationalities Service (ACNS) in Singapore and Indonesia to assist with the resettlement of boat refugees fleeing war-torn Vietnam in search of temporary safe haven in Indonesia.

He returned to the United States in 1980 and worked for ACNS in Fort Chaffee, Arkansas, helping to resettle Cuban refugees who arrived from the Cuban Port of Mariel. He then moved to the ACNS main office in New York to direct a special nationwide resettlement program for Cuban Refugees, and then was promoted to oversee the nationwide resettlement program in 27 cities for refugees from Southeast Asia, Africa and elsewhere.

Political advocacy

In 1986 Sharry left ACNS and moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts where he became the Executive Director of Centro Presente, a local organization that worked with Central Americans who had fled civil war and human rights violations in their countries of origin to seek safe haven in the greater Boston area. While there he helped to found the Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy (MIRA) Coalition, a statewide immigrant advocacy organization.

In 1990 he was hired to become the Executive Director of the National Immigration Forum, one of the nation's premier immigration policy organizations based in Washington, D.C. It has been directly involved in every major legislative policy debate related to immigration since its founding in 1982. At the Forum he emerged as one of the leading pro-immigrant spokespeople, appearing frequently on television and radio, being quoted regularly in print publications, and addressing audiences throughout the country.

During his tenure at the Forum, he helped win relief for Central American and Haitian refugees, protected family reunification, and promoted a comprehensive overhaul of the nation's immigration system that would simultaneously reduce illegal immigration through smart enforcement, provide a path to legal status and citizenship to illegal immigrants in the U.S., and reform the legal immigration system.

America's Voice

In 2008 he left the Forum to become the founder and Executive Director of America's Voice,[2] an organization that serves as the communications arm of the immigration reform movement. Since its inception America's Voice has become a visible and vocal advocate for comprehensive immigration reform, the DREAM Act (a measure that would enable young people who immigrated to America illegally to attend college or serve in the military as a way to earn citizenship), and administrative changes aimed at relieving the sense of siege experienced in immigrant communities throughout America as local and federal enforcement continues to be expanded.

Sharry has also been featured in the documentary film series "How Democracy Works Now" by filmmakers Shari Robertson and Michael Camerini. The series features 12 films about the immigration debate in America from 2000 through 2007. The last film in the series was aired on HBO in March 2010 under the title "Senators' Bargain." It shows Sharry working with both Senator Edward Kennedy and the Bush White House for an immigration compromise that would have legalized most of the nation's 12 million undocumented immigrants, a compromise that was defeated on the floor of the U.S. Senate.

Film

Sharry is featured in the documentary film Last Best Chance, Story Twelve of the series How Democracy Work Now, from filmmakers Shari Robertson and Michael Camerini. A cut of the film premiered on HBO in March 2010, under the title The Senator's Bargain.

He also appeared in The Game Is On, Story One in the series How Democracy Works Now. Frank is shown in Iowa giving a training seminar for media. Other films he appears in through the series include:

See also

External links

References

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