Los Angeles Times
By Kate Linthicum
February 12, 2015
Homeland
Security chief Jeh Johnson on Thursday asked immigrants in Los Angeles
to “step forward” and apply for President Obama’s expanded deferred action program.
At
a packed event at the L.A. Central Library, Johnson touted the benefits
of the program, which will grant up to 5 million immigrants living in
the country illegally
the chance to stay and work in the U.S. without fear of deportation.
He went so far as to present his own pen to one woman who raised her hand when he asked who in the room was eligible to apply.
“Ma’am, I’d like you to fill out your application with it,” Johnson said.
Johnson’s
visit to Los Angeles is a part of a major public relations push as
federal officials prepare to launch the first phase of the program’s
expansion next week.
The
government will start accepting applications Feb. 18 for the expanded
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which grants deportation
relief and work permits
to many people who came to the U.S. before they were 16.
Obama
has changed the program from two years to three and has expanded the
criteria so it is now available to anyone brought to the U.S. as a
child, no matter their current
age.
Johnson
said he hopes to implement the next phase of the program, which will
offer the same protections for up to 4 million parents of U.S. citizens,
by May.
Applications
for the program have not yet been released. That means Alejandra
Velazquez, the Mexican immigrant who took home Johnson’s pen Thursday,
will have to wait
to use it.
Johnson
and his second-in-command, Deputy Secretary Ali Mayorkas, have each
toured the country in recent weeks to promote Obama's programs, with
stops in immigrant-heavy
states including New York, Illinois, Texas and Arizona.
Their
push comes amid a brewing political battle over the agency's funding
that could threaten the future of the program they are touting.
House
Republicans angry about Obama's unilateral actions on immigration
recently approved a budget for Homeland Security that stripped funding
for the new immigration
programs. Senate Democrats have blocked that bill, and Obama has vowed
to veto it, leaving the agency's funding in question. The department is
set to run out of money Feb. 28 -- a prospect Johnson described as
unacceptable.
“It
is like trying to drive across the country with no more than five
gallons of gas at a time and not knowing where the next gas station is,”
he said.
Johnson
spoke alongside L.A. County Supervisor Hilda Solis, whose east-county
district is home to hundreds of thousands of immigrants in the country
without permission,
and L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti, who recently launched an initiative
called #StepForwardLA that aims to help 100,000 people eligible for the
expanded program to apply.
“It
is important for us to get the word out that these programs are in
place,” said Garcetti, who said his office is helping to organize
information campaigns in public
schools, parks and libraries.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment