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PRLDEF_Press
César Perales
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Regan Morris
Lawcrossings
When César Perales took over
as executive director of the
Puerto Rican Legal Defense
and Education Fund two years
ago, it was a triumphant
homecoming. LawCrossing
speaks to Mr. Perales about
how the PLDEF has expanded
its mandate to fight for
justice for all Latinos. |
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In the early 1970s, Perales
was an idealistic attorney
fresh out of law school and
eager to change the world.
With two like-minded
attorneys, he founded the
Puerto Rican Legal Defense
and Education Fund (PRLDEF)
in 1972.
Two years ago, after several
decades in public interest
and private sector
positions, Perales returned
to the center he founded—and
he has been lauded for
bringing the organization
out of near financial ruin.
Raising money for the
nonprofit group is a big
part of Perales' job (LawCrossing
met him at a unique
fundraiser through the
Latino Film Festival in New
York).
Perales, who was born in New
York, not Puerto Rico, said
he was inspired to start the
center because he saw many
Puerto Rican children being
ignored by the public school
system and many adults
struggling to seek justice.
Puerto Ricans, Perales said,
had no voice in the city's
public life.
"There was a lot of interest
in the '60s and '70s about
civil rights," he said.
"Other groups were forming
organizations, and there
were three very young
lawyers at the time who
wanted to start a legal
organization that would
bring lawsuits that would
impact the Puerto Rican
community."
PRLDEF's first case was with
Aspira, a youth education
and development group that
wanted to help Puerto Rican
children learn to speak
English in public schools.
Aspira v. New York City
Board of Education
forced the school system to
stop ignoring
non-English-speaking
children and implement
bilingual study programs.
"The analogy which was made
incidentally by the United
States Supreme Court was it
was like ignoring deaf
children," he said. "And
that you wouldn't do that.
And that you could not just
ignore kids who don't speak
English."
The case impacted countless
Puerto Rican children and
other Spanish-speaking
students, who had been
ignored until they could
learn English on their own.
New York's Latino community
was dominated by Puerto
Ricans during the 1970s, he
said.
"While we're still called
the Puerto Rican Legal
Defense and Education Fund,
we are much more pan-Latino
than any other group,
because in New York, we have
such a diverse group of
Latino nationality groups,"
he said.
The group has also
championed migrant rights,
voting rights, and
employment rights cases for
Latinos, including two
class-action lawsuits
against the New York City
Police Department to
increase the number of
Latino officers.
Recently, the group won a
victory for Mexican day
laborers in New Jersey,
winning the immigrants the
right to stand in a public
places looking for work.
"In a town called Freehold,
New Jersey, they actually
started ticketing people
standing on street corners
looking for work because the
local community was very
upset by the thought of
these people standing
around," he said. "We
actually brought a lawsuit
to establish the right—it
was a Constitutional
argument—that they had the
right to free expression.
And we won."
In between his careers at
PRLDEF, Perales moved to
Washington at the end of the
Carter administration and
served as an assistant
secretary. He then became
New York State Commissioner
of Social Services and was
deputy mayor of the city
under Mayor David Dinkins.
He also spent eight years as
a senior vice president at
New York Presbyterian
Hospital.
Returning to PRLDEF was a
happy homecoming for
Perales, and news of his
return garnered much
attention, including a
full-page article in the
New York Times.
"I've had a lot of fun
coming back and trying to
rejuvenate this," he said.
"The reason I got a lot of
attention when I returned
was because the organization
was in serious trouble in
terms of their ability to
raise money. And people were
seeing the place as less
relevant. And I've been here
two years, and I think we're
well on our way to
reestablishing ourselves."
The group's mission is to
litigate cases that have a
big effect on the Latino
community. Perales oversees
six staff attorneys and
dozens of pro bono
attorneys from some of the
biggest law firms in the
country.
As members of a territory of
the United States, Puerto
Ricans are citizens of the
United States. But perhaps
the biggest issue facing
PRLDEF concerns non-citizens
and their ability to hold
driver's licenses and other
forms of identification.
"Increasingly in the last 10
years, it's been the fact
that there's this giant
group of people who are
immigrants coming from Latin
America. That today is the
biggest issue we're facing,
not just the Northeast, but
in the whole country," he
said. "And what do we do
about people who are here
undocumented? We spend a
great amount of time
fighting over the issue of
driver's licenses being
taken away from people who
were not here legally. It
became a much bigger issue
after September 11."
Perales said the political
debate around undocumented
workers has flopped in the
last few decades and that
the laws need to be fixed.
Companies need the workers,
but without documents, the
workers can be easily
exploited.
"Most of the business
people, including
Republicans—they want to be
able to use the labor
entering the country. A lot
of poor people, less well
off, are the ones against
immigrant labor because they
fear it will affect their
wages," he said. "They also
don't want to compete for
housing. But if you're rich,
you understand the need for
labor in this country.
Unemployment keeps dropping;
we're down to five percent
in this country. We don't
have enough people to work
in this country. We need
people."
Although PRLDEF is primarily
a litigating group, it also
conducts educational
seminars and the occasional
study. Most recently, it
reported on the low number
of Latino judges in the
United States. The group was
disappointed that President
George W. Bush did not
choose the first Latino for
the vacant Supreme Court
seat.
"But I think I would have
been even more disappointed
if he would have named a
very conservative Hispanic,"
he said.
Perales said attorneys and
law students interested in
public service should ask
their law schools about
loan-forgiveness programs.
Many law schools are
starting to forgive a part
of a law school loan for
every year an attorney works
in public service. Perales
sees it as a growing trend.
"For people who are
interested in public
service, the most important
thing, I think, is that you
get up in the morning and
you want to get to work," he
said. "If you don't want to
get up in the morning and go
to work, there's a problem.
You're going to be miserable
throughout your life. So if
what turns you on is doing
public service, there are
ways to find it."
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