Wall Street Journal
By Miriam Jordan
March 14, 2013
The
number of applicants for an Obama administration program that allows
young illegal immigrants to remain in the U.S. dropped to its lowest
monthly level yet in January, a decline that experts attributed to the
possibility of a comprehensive immigration overhaul, lack of awareness
and the cost to apply.
The
Department of Homeland Security said that about 31,000 people applied
for the program, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, in
January, and fewer than 15,000 had applied by mid-February. That is down
from more than 113,000 applicants last October alone, soon after the
program started.
WSJ
immigration reporter Sara Murray says negotiators have been
tight-lipped as they try to hash out a deal and avoid public disputes.
Key issues: figuring out the thorny details of a pathway to citizenship
and setting rules for future workers.
The
slowdown comes despite what DACA's proponents hailed as potentially
life-changing benefits for those who qualify. In addition to lifting the
threat of deportation, it grants a work permit to the immigrants, most
of whom were brought to the U.S. as children. Critics of DACA have
claimed that the program was implemented to boost President Barack
Obama's support among Hispanics in the November election.
All
told, about 1.8 million young immigrants are potential beneficiaries,
according to estimates by the American Immigration Council, a national
advocacy organization. By mid-February, the latest data available, about
420,000 people had applied, and about 200,000 cases had been approved.
When
the government began accepting DACA requests on Aug. 15, immigrant
youngsters and their families jammed school gyms and community centers
where nonprofit and faith-based groups held workshops to help with
forms.
"We
saw a rush of applicants who stepped forward with all their documents
in order," said Emily Creighton, a Council staff attorney. But "there
are many more who are still afraid to come out of the shadows or who
lack access to legal resources."
Some
immigrants are holding off because Congress has begun to consider an
immigration overhaul that could offer legal permanent status to most of
the 11 million illegal immigrants in the U.S. The DACA program doesn't
offer a green card or a path to citizenship, and participants must
reapply every two years.
"Their
parents are saying you might as well wait for immigration reform," said
Josefina Beecher, a member of the board of the Skagit Immigrant Rights
Council in Mount Vernon, Wash. Ms. Beecher recalls standing-room only
crowds at DACA workshops held by the organization last year, but said a
recent event attracted fewer than 30.
She
and other advocates said that many applicants, who mainly hail from
working-class families, are deterred by the $500 fee for applying. In
some states, like Washington, private foundations and credit unions are
starting to establish low-interest loan programs and other schemes for
applicants of limited means.
Applicants
must prove they arrived in the U.S. before they were 16 years old, be
under the age of 31 now and have lived continuously in the U.S. for the
past five years. If they are military veterans they must prove they were
honorably discharged. They also must have graduated from high school or
show they are working toward a high-school diploma.
The
education requirement poses a barrier: 23% of the potential recipients
still need to fulfill it, according to the Skagit Council's estimates.
"Immigrants
who work on a dairy farm aren't traveling to town for school," said
Mary Jo Dudley, director of the Cornell Farmworker Program, which has
been conducting workshops in rural upstate New York. "They came to this
country to work."
Many
immigrants are having trouble meeting the minimum requirements for
enrolling in graduate equivalency degree, or GED, courses in some
states, such as New York, according to Ms. Dudley.
Ms.
Dudley's group isn't the only one trying to drum up interest in the
program. United We Dream, which represents illegal young immigrants,
plans to launch next week a national campaign to attract DACA
applicants.
The
group plans to join forces with local groups to bolster outreach and
hold DACA events that will offer an array of services, including legal
assistance, micro-loans and educational opportunities for potential
applicants and their families. Mobile units will visit far-flung areas.
"We're amping it up," said Lorella Praelli, the organization's policy director.
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