Wall Street Journal
By Miriam Jordan
September 5, 2014
For
two years, UC Berkeley-educated civil engineer Mario Lio had to work as
a math tutor and restaurant worker to make ends meet. Today, he is a
project engineer for a
Bay Area firm that helped build the new Levi's Stadium for the San
Francisco 49ers.
The
reason, he says, is DACA—Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals—an
Obama administration initiative that marked its second anniversary last
month. When Mr. Lio, 25
years old, qualified for the program, he says, "So many doors opened
overnight."
Through
the program, he received a Social Security number and driver's license.
He then got a job in his field of study. "I became a new person in some
ways," says Mr.
Lio, who arrived in the U.S. from Peru when he was 12 and remained here
illegally.
DACA
grants undocumented immigrants who came to the U.S. as children a
two-year reprieve from deportation and a work permit if they can prove
they arrived before age 16,
have no criminal history and meet other criteria. Nearly 700,000 people
have enrolled since the program began.
Opponents
of DACA say it amounts to a de facto temporary legalization program
that undermines the deterrent force of U.S. immigration law. Mark
Krikorian, executive director
of the Center for Immigration Studies, which calls for tougher laws to
combat illegal immigration, describes the program as "green-card lite."
The
program, which is renewable every two years for participants, is one of
the most significant immigration actions taken by the Obama
administration. The other has been
overseeing the deportation of some two million immigrants, most of them
here illegally.
As
the first DACA enrollees have begun applying to renew their status,
immigrant advocates are urging Mr. Obama to go "big and bold" and expand
the program to include
many of the 10 million or so undocumented immigrants who currently
don't qualify for the program.
In
particular, they want relief extended to the parents of DACA
recipients, U.S. citizens and legal residents. Advocates are also urging
the president to include individuals
who didn't qualify for DACA because they were above the age limit or
entered the country when they were over the age limit, according to
program rules.
Felipe
Sousa-Rodriguez, a Brazilian immigrant involved in lobbying for DACA,
said Mr. Obama has the choice to cement his legacy as "deporter in
chief" or to build on DACA.
"We
are urging him to go big on relief, so that our families may be able to
work, be protected from deportation and further contribute to the
country we call our home,"
said Mr. Sousa-Rodriguez, deputy managing director of United We Dream,
an advocacy network.
DACA foes say its extension to a wider group by the president would be an abuse of executive authority.
In
a July letter to the president, 24 Republican state senators and
representatives from Texas urged Mr. Obama to "suspend your efforts to
issue new Executive Orders that
weaken enforcement of our immigration laws" and said DACA "has sent the
regrettable message that illegal immigration will not be punished in
the United States."
In
June, the DACA program began accepting applications from people seeking
a renewal and from those now old enough to apply. Immigrant-advocacy
and legal-aid groups have
been assisting those tackling the DACA application, for which there is a
$465 fee.
"The
number of people coming in is steadily increasing," said Daniel Sharp,
legal director for Carecen, a Los Angeles organization that has helped
about 2,300 people participate
in the program.
Oscar,
an illegal immigrant who arrived in the U.S. as a teenager from Mexico,
didn't qualify for DACA because he was older than 30 in June 2012, the
cutoff age for the
program.
He
has a dual degree in urban studies and political science from the
University of California, Berkeley, but does restaurant work and odd
jobs to support himself.
"I
am waiting for legislation or relief that will make it possible for me
to give back to this country," said the student, who declined to reveal
his last name because
he remains undocumented.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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