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ACS - Immigrant Services
ACS - Immigrant Services
Administration for Children's Services
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Office of Immigrant Services and Language Affairs (ISLA)
ACS serves all New Yorkers, regardless of immigration status or English language proficiency. We provide services that respect your culture and language needs.
The Office of Immigrant Services and Language Affairs (ISLA) provides support and guidance on immigration and language access issues. Given that 50% of NYC children live in a household with at least one foreign-born family member and 25% of New Yorkers are limited English proficient (LEP), immigration and language access considerations are integral to child welfare cases in New York City.
Immigrant Services and Language Affairs (ISLA) ensures support for ACS clients who have immigration and/or language access needs by providing resources, training, guidance about agency policy, and case support. In addition, ISLA serves as a liaison with the
Mayor's Office of Immigrant Affairs
(MOIA) and other city agencies, and advocates to coordinate responses to issues affecting immigrant and limited English proficient clients.
For more information about each area of our work, please see below:
Resources for Immigrants
Know Your Rights
Immigrant Services and Language Affairs Data & Policies
Contact
How to File Language Access Complaints
Google Translate Disclaimer
Additional Resources
Know Your Rights
In accordance with
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act
NYC Executive Order 120
, and
Local Law 30
All children and families have the right to:
Communicate with ACS and provider
agency staff in their preferred language.
All ACS and provider agency clients have the right to ask for an interpreter when communicating with ACS or provider agency staff.
All ACS and provider agency clients have the right to receive services in their preferred language.
All ACS and provider agency staff must provide equal access to services, regardless of a client's English language proficiency.
Interpretation services for clients with limited English proficiency must be accurate, timely, and free for the client.
Ask for documents from ACS to be translated into their preferred language
All ACS commonly distributed public-facing documents should be translated into the 10 citywide languages: Arabic, Bengali, Chinese, French, Haitian Creole, Korean, Russian, Polish, Spanish, and Urdu.
If an ACS document is not available in the client's preferred language, ACS can have the document translated into that language.
ACS will translate documents into clients' preferred languages or have their documents translated into English for ACS staff.
Requests for translation should be sent to Language.Access@acs.nyc.gov
Receive child welfare services regardless of their immigration status.
Have any immigration status information they share with ACS or our provider organizations remain confidential, with very few exceptions.
ACS and our provider organizations are
only
allowed to ask about a client's immigration status for the purpose of determining whether they might qualify for certain specific programs, services, or benefits. With the client's permission, ACS may also ask about their immigration status for the purpose of connecting them with immigration legal help.
Immigrant Services and Language Affairs Data & Policies
Language Access Implementation Plan 2024
Language Access Policy
Local Law 73 Report 2025
Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) Immigration Assistance Policy
Local Law 145 Report
Contact
ACS Language Access Coordinator: Lauren McSwain, Director of Immigrant Services and Language Affairs
If you have a question for ACS related to:
Immigration, email us at immigrationQuestions@acs.nyc.gov
Language access, email us at language.access@acs.nyc.gov
U Visa Certification, email us at uvisa@acs.nyc.gov
For all other ACS-related issues, you can call the ACS
Office of Advocacy
Help Line at
212-676-9421
If you have additional questions, call
311
To learn more about your Immigration rights, visit the
Mayor's Office for Immigrant Affairs
How to File Language Access Complaints
You can file a complaint if you did not receive service from the NYC Administration for Children’s Services, because of the language you speak. You can file a complaint anonymously and regardless of your immigration status. You are not required to leave your name, if you want to be anonymous.
You can file complaints by:
Emailing ACS Language Access Coordinator at
language.access@acs.nyc.gov
, or
Calling 311 or 212-NEW-YORK (212-639-9675)
It helps if you can provide this information:
What the problem was
When it happened
Who you spoke with
Office address you went to or the phone number you called
Language you speak
Google Translate Disclaimer
The NYC Administration for Children’s Services website is provided in English. However, the "Google Translate" option may assist you in reading it in other languages. Please note that “Google Translate” cannot translate all types of documents, and it should not be relied upon for vital information. The NYC Administration for Children’s Services does not guarantee the accuracy of the translation provided by this tool.
Additional Resources:
The
Mayor's Office of Immigrant Affairs
(MOIA)
New York State:
Office of Children and Family Services