[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 21 (Thursday, February 4, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S664-S665]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO ESTHER OLAVARRIA
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, I am proud to recognize Ms. Esther
Olavarria, an extraordinary public servant who has worked for decades
to build an immigration system that is fair and just for all. I know
Esther from her time in the Senate as Senator Kennedy's lead advisor on
immigration matters for the Judiciary Committee. In the Senate and more
recently in the administration, Esther's intelligent, thoughtful advice
and analysis has been invaluable. She is stepping down this week after
serving as senior counselor to Department of Homeland Security
Secretary Johnson. I have no doubt the Secretary will miss her, as I do
here in the Senate.
Esther was an early appointee of the Obama administration, serving
first as a member of the President's transition team on immigration,
then as the Department's Deputy Assistant Secretary for Immigration and
Border Security and later as counselor to Secretary Janet Napolitano.
During that time she advocated fixing our Nation's broken immigration
system and the pressing need to provide protection for asylees and
refugees, improve detention conditions, and ensure accountability and
transparency in immigration enforcement.
In 2013, Esther was asked to serve as the White House Director of
Immigration Reform. Her wealth of experience made her an invaluable
asset in our bipartisan effort to pass the Border Security, Economic
Opportunity and Immigration Modernization Act in 2013. The bill
overwhelmingly passed the Senate with the bipartisan support of 68
Senators. I remain disappointed that that important bill was not taken
up in the House, and I hope the Senate will one day turn again to this
legislation. When we do, I know that Esther will be ready to provide
her support once again as she has so many times when the Senate has
turned its focus to the issue of immigration.
In the Senate, Esther understood the importance of working across the
aisle to get something done. Like her boss, Senator Kennedy, Esther
forged unlikely partnerships and found partners who were drawn to her
passion, her sense of humanity, and her dedication. She was a key
adviser for the comprehensive immigration reform bills of 2004, 2005,
2006, and 2007. Many of us remember Senator Kennedy turning to Esther
during the 2007 negotiations not only so that he could seek her
counsel, but so that other Senators could benefit from her expertise.
Everyone--Republicans, Democrats, advocates, journalists--listened, and
everyone was better off for having Esther nearby.
Esther, like her late boss, has always been driven by a deep
commitment to making our communities stronger and more vibrant. She has
advocated on behalf of immigrant children and she has fought to reform
inhumane detention practices. And she has underscored the critical
importance of the relationship
[[Page S665]]
between law enforcement and the immigrant community so that all our
communities are safe.
A Cuban immigrant who came to the United States at the age of 5,
Esther has always sought to advance immigration policies rooted in the
American values of fairness and family. Her life experiences as a child
led her to a career in immigration law, first helping low-income
immigrants in Florida through direct client representation and by
cofounding the not-for-profit legal assistance organization Florida
Immigrant Advocacy Center, and then coming to Washington, DC.
I have no doubt that Esther will continue to be an important adviser,
but more importantly a devoted friend to so many who have been
fortunate to know her. She is an exemplary public servant. I commend
Esther for her years of service and wish her and her family the best in
their future endeavors.
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