International Business Times
By Brianna Lee
October 29, 2014
President
Barack Obama is expected to make a move on immigration reform in the
later months of this year, after he delayed plans to issue executive
orders until after the Nov. 4 midterm elections.
The president may extend deportation relief to potentially millions of
undocumented immigrants. But some groups fear that relief may leave out
the undocumented who are also lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender.
One
of the most hotly anticipated, and politically polarizing, moves the
Obama administration is considering involves expanding the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which was
launched by executive order in 2012. Undocumented immigrants who
arrived to the U.S. as children can get a reprieve from deportation
under DACA. Several reports have speculated that Obama could extend that
protection to family members of DACA-eligible immigrants,
or even undocumented parents of U.S. citizens.
But
the idea of a formal family relationship requirement for relief
concerns some groups who say LGBT communities have a much harder time
establishing formal family ties. “LGBT people didn’t
have access to marriage equality for so long -- and in some cases,
still don’t have that,” said Aaron Morris, legal director for
Immigration Equality, an organization that provides legal assistance to
LGBT immigrants. “For families, it can be really complicated
to have a formally recognized document that proves you are a child’s
mother or a spouse of an individual.”
There
are an estimated 267,000 LGBT undocumented immigrants in the United
States. Immigration Equality, along with around a dozen other LGBT
activist groups, sent a letter to the White House
in August to prod the administration to expand any potential
deportation relief beyond just those with formal family ties.
“We
urge you to expand affirmative relief through a second track for
individuals who have strong, long-standing ties with their communities
as demonstrated through long-term residency,” the
letter read. “This flexibility recognizes that certain types of
equities – such as marriage and child-rearing – are significantly harder
for undocumented LGBTQ immigrants to have accumulated since their
arrival in this country or during recent legal developments
in the past few years.”
The
Supreme Court’s 2013 ruling overturning a key section of the Defense of
Marriage Act opened several new pathways for people in same-sex
binational couples to bring spouses and children
into the United States (provided one partner is a U.S. citizen). But
many of those benefits are still limited to those living in states that
recognize same-sex marriages.
Morris
said another major concern was protections for immigrants who come from
countries that persecute LGBT people. Staffing more asylum officers and
increasing privacy for LGBT immigrants
were both measures the Obama administration could take to increase
those protections, he said. “Right now, a lot of paperwork we send [to
embassies in foreign countries] for married couples makes it obvious
they are the same sex,” he said. “It has caused a
lot of extreme nervousness among families because they don’t want a
homophobic country to know they’re same-sex. We want to ensure their
privacy and safety.”
Officials
from the Department of Homeland Security and Justice Department are
reportedly sending in their final recommendations this week on actions
the president should take on immigration
reform. But the administration has largely stayed tight-lipped about
when these actions would come about and what they might look like. Last
week, White House spokesman Josh Earnest dismissed rumors that the
administration was looking to potentially double
its stock of green cards, and said Obama had not made any final
decisions about the measures to take.
Immigration
advocates, meanwhile, have been visibly angry at the administration’s
delays, saying that immigrant families would continue to face fear of
deportation and separation the longer
the president waits to act.
“We
need him to do it, whatever the package is, the day after the
midterms,” Morris said. “Every day that goes by we’re hearing from LGBT
people who are being deported.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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