LAMA joins faith leaders advocating just immigration policies with Senator Gallego

Originally posted on the LAMA newsletter.

Arizona faith leaders meet with Senator Ruben Gallego and team on May 6, 2026 regarding ICE and Immigration policies.

On Wednesday, May 6, Solveig Muus at LAMA joined faith leaders for a meeting with Senator Ruben Gallego to express our deep concerns about immigration practices and policies impacting communities across Arizona and the nation. The gathering was convened by Rev. Dr. Katie Sexton of the Arizona Faith Network.

Representing diverse faith traditions and community organizations, we shared stories from our communities, lifted up the human impact of detention and deportation policies, and called on Senator Gallego and our elected leaders to partner with us in protecting human dignity, transparency, safety, and compassionate immigration reform.

We are grateful for Senator Gallego’s commitment to protecting vulnerable communities across Arizona—not only through votes and legislation, but by continuing to show up, listen, and work alongside faith leaders, immigrant communities, and local advocates who see the human impact of federal policy every day. We urge him to keep using his voice and office to defend the dignity, safety, and due process of immigrants, asylum seekers, Dreamers, children, families, and all who are living in fear.

Below are Solveig’s prepared remarks:

Senator Gallego, thank you for making time to hear directly from faith communities.

As director of Lutheran Advocacy Ministry of Arizona, what we call LAMA, I represent the Rev. Deborah Hutterer, Bishop of the Grand Canyon Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. The synod includes congregations across Arizona, the Navajo Nation, southern Nevada, and parts of Utah. In Arizona, that’s more than 25,000 people in 73 congregations. I’ve spoken with leaders from Our Saviour’s, San Juan Bautista, Mount Zion and Faith La Fe Lutheran churches in Tucson and Phoenix, as well as Lutheran Social Services of the Southwest, serving all of Arizona.

From a Lutheran perspective, immigration is not only a policy issue. It is a human issue, a moral issue, and a matter of faith. We believe every person is created in the image of God and carries God-given dignity. That includes immigrants, asylum seekers, refugees, Dreamers, mixed-status families, and people who are simply trying to live, work, worship, and raise children in peace.

What we are hearing is fear. Even when ICE is not physically present in a congregation, people are afraid because they know what is happening in other communities, including places like Minneapolis. They hear stories, they see raids, they worry about being separated from their children, and they begin to ask whether church, school, work, or even the grocery store is safe. That fear is crippling our worshiping communities; the burdens of keeping in contact with parishioners who are afraid of being picked up at any moment, of feeding and supporting families already on the margins and not qualifying for food assistance, medical benefits, or a vote, is overwhelming.

Our Lutheran communities may not all agree on every border-security funding question. But we do find common ground here: migrants are not threats to be managed; they are neighbors to be seen, respected, and protected from harm.

Arizona knows the gifts immigrants bring. They strengthen our churches, care for our elders, start businesses, serve in our communities, raise families, and enrich the moral and cultural life of this state.

Lutherans also have a long, practical history in this work. Through Lutheran Social Services of the Southwest, which employs 400 people in Maricopa, Pima, Cochise and Santa Cruz Counties – or did, until the number of refugees allowed in the U.S. was reduced from 100,000 in 2024 to 7,500 in 2026 – and Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service, now Global Refuge, we have helped resettle refugees, accompany asylum seekers, and welcome people fleeing violence and persecution for generations. Since 1939, to be exact. This is not new for us. It is part of who we are.

So our ask is simple: please use your voice and your relationships in Congress to reestablish a fair and functioning asylum system. Speak up for immigrants, Dreamers, asylum seekers, and the churches walking beside them. Create a meaningful legislation allowing churches to be true sanctuaries of protection from those persecuting immigrants. And help Congress remember that safety and human dignity must never be treated as opposites. They belong together. Thank you.

Pastors and leaders from Tucson congregations Iglesia Lutheran San Juan Bautista, Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church and Mount Zion Lutheran Church, as well as Faith La Fe Lutheran Church in Phoenix, and Lutheran Social Services of the Southwest, contributed their experiences, stories and ideas for LAMA’s response. Thank you!

Ensuring Health Care for Nevadans: An Urgent Call for Justice and Action

Nevadans without health coverage have until Dec. 15, 2025 to enroll through Nevada Health Link, the state’s official health insurance marketplace, if they want coverage that begins Jan. 1, 2026. Enrollment through Nevada Health Link runs from Nov. 1, 2025 through Jan. 15, 2026, and coverage that starts Jan. 1 requires enrollment by Dec. 15. 

Nevada Health Link is the only place where qualifying residents who don’t have employer-sponsored insurance, Medicare, or Medicaid can access federal tax credits to help make health insurance affordable. 

But without congressional action to extend the enhanced Affordable Care Act tax credits—which are currently scheduled to expire at the end of this year—many Nevadans could face sharply rising costs. Experts warn that monthly premiums for those on the marketplace are expected to rise significantly in 2026, with average rate increases of about 26 percent before subsidies. 

Approximately 95,000 Nevadans receive enhanced subsidies to lower their monthly premium costs on Nevada Health Link, and more than 110,000 Nevadans are currently enrolled in coverage through the marketplace.  If enhanced subsidies expire, many could see their out-of-pocket costs rise substantially, and some could become uninsured. 

Families across Nevada are already stretched thin. In our congregations, I meet people every week who are being forced to choose between medications, groceries, and rent, choices no one should ever have to make.

At a time when critical safety-net programs for food, housing, and heating are being cut, the church is seeing the human cost up close. As people of faith, we believe every person is created in the image of God and deserves to live with dignity. These rising costs fall heaviest on those with chronic health conditions and on our most vulnerable neighbors—people we pray with, serve alongside, and accompany in our ministries. Our call is clear: to stand with them, raise our voices, and insist on policies that protect life, promote justice, and ensure that no child of God is left behind.

Nationwide, more than 24 million Americans are enrolled in health coverage through Affordable Care Act marketplaces, making this open enrollment period particularly critical. 

Ensuring that Nevadans can access and afford quality health care remains a central priority for LEAN. We continue to advocate for policies that:

• Protect and extend affordable coverage by maintaining and expanding meaningful tax credits
• Prevent medical debt and strengthen consumer protections
• Lower the cost of prescription drugs
• Increase transparency in health care pricing
• Require accountability for hospitals and providers
• Ensure that hospital mergers do not reduce access or drive up costs for communities

We also want to hear from you. If rising health care costs or challenges accessing care are affecting you, your family, or your congregation, your stories strengthen our advocacy and help shape policy solutions grounded in real community needs. Please email us at paullarson@leanforjustice.org with HEALTH CARE in the subject line, and we will be in touch.

The ELCA Social Statement on Health Care reminds us that:
“Health is central to our well-being, vital to relationships, and helps us live out our vocations in family, work, and community… Caring for the health of others expresses both love for our neighbor and responsibility for a just society.”

Immigration and Refugee Resources

As the new administration’s policies and executive orders are revealed, LEAN would like to offer some resources and alerts for Nevada parishioners seeking ways to help protect refugees in our midst.

First, read Presiding Bishop Eaton’s Pastoral Letter on Executive Orders HERE

Also, The Asociación de Ministerios Latinos de la ELCA has released a statement in response to executive orders of the U.S. government. English and Spanish versions can both be found HERE!

Check out Global Refuge’s explainer of the key executive orders and proclamations that directly impact refugees and other immigrants in the United States and beyond. Click HERE.

Attend Global Refuge’s Policy and Advocacy Team on February 4 at 11 AM PT for “Post-Inauguration Days: Understanding Recent Policy Changes from the Trump Administration and the 119th Congress” Register HERE.

Plan a worship welcoming the stranger and centered on celebrating new refugees. Click HERE for the Worship Order!

Learn How Trump’s Rescission of Protected Areas Policies Undermines Safety for All by Reading This Fact Sheet Or This Handout in Espanol

Visit National Immigration Law Center’s Know Your Rights: Expediated Removal Expansion Information. Click HERE.

Print Red Cards & How To Use Your Red Card Available at Your Worship Space

Read The Asociación de Ministerios Latinos de la ELCA‘s statement in response to executive orders of the U.S. government. English and Spanish versions can both be found HERE.

Share AMMPRO’s (Accompanying Migrant Minors with Protection, Advocacy, Representation and Opportunities) Blog With Friends & Family

Sign Bread For The World’s ‘Nourish Our Future’ petition to end child hunger

Sign the Nourish Our Future petition urging our senators and representatives to end child hunger in the U.S. and around the world!

Why is this important?

Millions of children in the U.S. live in households facing food insecurity. Globally, almost 45 million children suffer from severe hunger, and nearly half of all preventable deaths among children under five are attributed to malnutrition. Child hunger is a local and a global problem, but together we can make a difference. 

Sign Bread for the World’s petition TODAY calling on the 119th Congress to Nourish Our Future, and join Bread for the World online for the Nourish Our Future launch on February 4! It is integral that we show U.S. Congress that there is broad and deep support across the country to ensure all children are fed and nourished.

We want to influence, empower, and work with Congress to pass legislation that:

  • fully funds and modernizes the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC)
  • expands a Child Tax Credit that prioritizes cutting child poverty and ending hunger
  • increases funding for global nutrition programs for children
  • helps reduce food insecurity on college campuses

Below is more detail on why we want Congress to pass legislation that addresses these issues:

Fully funding and modernizing WIC for all eligible participants

WIC (the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children) provides mothers and young children in the U.S. with nutritious food, nutrition education, breastfeeding support, immunization screening, and important health and social services referrals. The program reaches approximately 6.7 million women and young children, including about half of all infants born in the United States.

WIC participation leads to healthier eating, increased birth weights, fewer premature births, and fewer infant deaths. The program helps support proper brain development in young children, contributing to the child’s ability to learn and thrive later in life. WIC also has a significant economic impact due to reduced healthcare costs.

Recognizing these powerful outcomes, Congress has fully funded WIC on a bipartisan basis for decades. In 2021, the American Rescue Plan Act modernized and strengthened the program to reach more eligible families. Unfortunately, due to congressional inaction and polarization, not only have these changes been rolled back, but WIC is in jeopardy of not being fully funded for the first time in 25 years. 

We are urging Congress to: 

  1. Recommit to fully fund WIC now and in the future, so that all who are eligible and apply have access 
  2. Restore reforms that strengthened the program and made it easier for families to sign up.

Expanding a Child Tax Credit that prioritizes cutting child poverty and ending hunger

The Child Tax Credit (CTC) serves as a lifeline for the most vulnerable and a beacon of hope for millions of families in the U.S. The expanded CTC, enacted as a part of the American Rescue Plan Act in 2021, significantly reduced child hunger and led to the lowest child poverty rate in our nation’s history. Bread for the World worked hard to pass the Child Tax Credit expansion in 2021. The expansion increased the amount of the credit and made two other critical policy changes, which have now expired 
and which Bread is working to restore. Those changes are:

  1. Full Refundability – This provision meant that even the poorest families who don’t make enough money to pay taxes still receive the full tax credit.
  2. Monthly payments rather than annual lump sum payments after tax filing. Data shows that families used the monthly payments to meet basic living expenses, with food topping the list of such expenses.

The proven, measurable success of the expanded Child Tax Credit and the 45% increase in child poverty since its expiration make clear that the passage of a similar bill would make an immediate and dramatic impact on child poverty and hunger.

Increasing funding for global nutrition programs for children

Programs that help prevent and treat child malnutrition in low-income countries save lives, help families and communities thrive, and build resilience and stability for generations to come. Increasing funding for these programs, a tiny fraction of the U.S. budget, is a compassionate and strategic response to soaring rates of child malnutrition right now and a wise investment in our shared future. 

Priority nutrition programs include: 

  • Treatment of acute malnutrition
  • Education and promotion of breastfeeding
  • Nutrition supplements for children, adolescent girls, and pregnant women
  • Education and promotion of good feeding and hygiene practices for infants and young children
  • Preventive malaria treatment
  • Fortification of staple food crops with nutrients

Developing solutions to college student hunger

Nearly 23% of all college students were food insecure in 2020, and students who were food insecure were less likely to get their bachelor’s degrees than those who were food secure. In addition, there is a substantial “SNAP gap,” meaning students who are eligible for SNAP (the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) or other assistance but do not receive benefits. 

To help close the SNAP gap, Bread for the World has identified three priorities: 

  1. Pass legislation in Congress that addresses this gap, such as The Opportunity to Address College Hunger Act or Closing the College Hunger Gap Act
  2. Persuade the Department of Education to inform low-income students matriculating on college or university campuses of their potential eligibility for SNAP, WIC, and other benefits.
  3. Partner with a research institute to study best practices for closing the SNAP gap and to identify which interventions have the potential to be brought to scale and to attract public funding through future advocacy.

How it will be delivered

Bread for the World representatives will deliver these petition signatures to the local and DC offices of Members of Congress.

SIGN THE PETITION!

LEAN Seeks New Director

Will Advocate For Nevadans at Legislature, Through Congregations

Lutheran Engagement and Advocacy in Nevada’s Policy Council is currently seeking a part-time Director to replace Bill Ledford, who left in early 2024 to take his first pastoral call in Utah.

In their capacity, the Director will work with the Policy Council to establish policy objectives, register as an official advocate/lobbyist at the Nevada Legislature, and work with ELCA congregations throughout Nevada to establish a grass roots, faith-based network of Christian believers to carry out the church’s ongoing mission to build a more just and fair society for all. As one of dozens of ELCA State Public Policy Offices across the nation, LEAN bases its advocacy and engagement efforts on the guidance of official ELCA Social Statements and Messages.

LEAN and its Director advocate on behalf of Nevada congregations in the Grand Canyon and Sierra Pacific synods. The 83rd Nevada Legislative Session begins Feb. 3, 2025, and runs for a minimum of 120 days.

The position is part-time and offered on a contract-only basis. The full Job Description and Working Agreement is available for viewing and download below.

For more information on the position, please email leanforjustice@gmail.com.