AP
By Josh Hoffner, Amy Taxin, and Alicia Caldwell
February 19, 2015
Brenda
Armendariz, her husband and their two Mexico-born children were hoping
to resolve their constant fears of being deported after President Barack
Obama issued his
latest executive orders on immigration.
But
now that a federal judge in Texas has blocked Obama's efforts to
protect four million more immigrants, her family is disillusioned and
her children feel stuck as the
president's offer of temporary legal status moves frustratingly beyond
their reach.
About
a third of the immigrants now living in the United States illegally
would be eligible for temporary protection if Obama's latest orders are
upheld in court, either
because they were brought to the U.S. as children or because their own
children have legal status in the country.
But
the advances and retreats on reform have been so frequent over the
years that many thousands of immigrants who are already eligible for
protection have given up for
now — they aren't applying for the work permits and Social Security
numbers they are entitled to under Obama's first executive order in 2012.
There
are a litany of reasons why, including general distrust of the
government, fear they'll be deported, and the nearly $500 in fees it
costs to apply. But the constant
uncertainty created by Washington's political divide also keeps them
away.
About
150 people have reached out to Arizona immigration attorney Lance Wells
this week, reacting with bafflement, fear and dismay to the latest
reversal, he said. His
message: "Be patient guys. We kind of knew this would be coming."
But their patience is wearing thin.
Armendariz
and her husband came to Tucson a decade ago with a son and daughter,
meaning to stay just long enough to earn some cash and head home to the
Mexican state of
Sonora. Instead, they overstayed their visas and settled down. Those
children are now 21 and 13, joined by two American citizen siblings: a
3-year-old boy and a one-month-old girl.
Like
so many other immigrants, this family has "mixed status," and the
mother, father and two oldest children didn't qualify for protection
under Obama's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA program, nearly three years ago.
With
the goal of keeping such families together, Obama's executive orders
announced in November would have applied to the older siblings starting
on Wednesday, and the
parents starting in May.
U.S.
District Judge Andrew Hanen of Texas temporarily blocked both
expansions after Obama's opponents sued, calling it an overreach of
presidential power. The Obama administration
plans to appeal, but 21-year-old Itzayana Aguirre Armendariz is already
giving up.
"I
don't know if it's just anger or disillusionment," Armendariz said. "I
tell her to not close herself off; that Obama already signed (the
executive actions) and that
now it's just about waiting and fighting."
Aguirre
Armendariz had to drop out of community college her freshman year
because her family couldn't afford the out-of-state tuition that
immigrants lacking legal status
must pay in Arizona. She was studying engineering and wants to go back
to school, but is stuck helping her mom make and sell tortillas and
bread.
With
the latest injunction causing more delays, she announced to the family
that she wants to move back to Mexico. Her father overruled that, but
they know they can't
keep their daughter's future on hold forever.
Armendariz's
13-year-old boy is still in public school and had his hopes set on
Disneyland, but those too were dashed; driving far from home remains too
risky and expensive,
she said.
Roman
Beltran, of Phoenix, also didn't qualify for DACA's first round, but
would be eligible under the expansion. He was brought to the U.S. from
Mexico at 5. "I was really
upset and frustrated because this is not the first time that I get my
hopes up with immigration," he said.
Beltran
had been on a separate path to legal permanent residency through his
wife until they got divorced. Now 36, he feels taken advantage of by the
political battles,
and says he simply wants to work and contribute.
"I just want a job, is what it boils down to. To be able to get a job legally, pay my taxes," Beltran said.
The
Obama administration had estimated that 890,000 immigrants could be
eligible for the deportation protections, according to internal Homeland
Security budget documents
from 2012. Others put the number at up to 1.7 million.
But as of last June, only 675,000 people were approved, according to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.
Luis
Martinez, a 31-year-old factory welder in Southern California, is still
hoping to qualify as the father of three American citizen boys. He's
got many reservations
about outing himself, but doesn't see much of a choice.
"I think this is temporary," Martinez said. "I think later on, this will be resolved."
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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