Imagine waking up one morning to the dream shattering news that, That your legal status is being stripped along with your career and to make matters worse you might get deported to a country that which they know nothing about. This is the case for the 800,000 dreamers living in the U.S right now after The Department of Homeland Security announced the termination of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. The program was a 2012 executive order by the Obama administration that granted the dreamers permission to work, study and live in the United Sates without getting deported. It was an Attempt to help the 800,000 Immigrants who were brought to the U.S as kids or Babies. I am furious the final decision because the department is attacking
After the Trump Administration announced the end to an executive branch program that has protected up to 800,000 undocumented immigrants since 2012, Democrats and Republicans have introduced several bills in Congress, each of which would provide a path to documented and legal residence. The legislation, Dream Act of 2017, primarily supported by Democrats is called the Dream Act, an acronym for Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors
In the United States, many families are currently being affected by the Dream Act’s failure to pass. The Dream Act would have given many undocumented children the ability to have a pathway to citizenship. The Dream Act believed in the importance of social support within the family by supporting family unification. However, due to its failure to pass, millions of undocumented children are now at risk of being deported and having their families divided. Although the U.S. government created a new policy known as the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), it is not providing immigrants with the same opportunity. DACA instead give undocumented people the opportunity to not be deported for a maximum of three years, but will never become a pathway to permanent citizenship. The Dream Act and DACA ultimately affects the physiological, emotional, and mental health of the immigrants who reside within the U.S.
With the event of President Donald Trump ending the DACA program (short for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) is a program started in 2012 by President Obama, which according to Wikipedia, “allowed some individuals who entered the country as minors, and had either entered or remained in the country illegally, to receive a renewable two-year period of deferred action from deportation and to be eligible for a work permit.” Now with DACA being ended by Trump, the minors, known as “Dreamers” have an uncertain future, with deportation being their biggest concern for these minors. This ultimately raises a question, if deported, where are these 800,000 undocumented “dreamers” going to go, and what effect does this have between the two countries’ relationship?
These Dreamers did not choose to be brought to the United States, but now that they are here, they must find a way to move forward in life. Jesus Contreras is a paramedic who lives in Houston, Texas. He was brought here as a kid from Mexico, and is part of the DACA program. He provided assistance in the relief after Hurricane Harvey in August of 2017. In an interview with BBC, Contreras says “I’ve never considered going back to Mexico. Everything I have, everything I’ve planted, my faith my religion, my friends are all here in the United States.” Dreamers like Contreras do not have lives in Mexico. They grew up here in the U.S. and have taken part and contributed to society here. Life in Mexico is very difficult at the time, which is why many flee to the United States. There is a lot of violence and crime making it not the best place to have a family. As of November 2017, Mexico has had a nationwide total of 20,878 murders within the year, that is an average of 69 murders per day (Torres). Mexico has become a very dangerous place, which is why many of the Dreamers were brought to the U.S. If the Dreamers are sent to Mexico, they will be in a place they not only do not know, but will also be in greater danger than if they were in the U.S. A lot of what our society is built on is education and schooling. It is fundamental in our development as people and as a nation. Through DACA, these Dreamers are able to attend schooling and learn how to give back to society. In 2010,
Hundreds of thousand Dreamers are waiting anxiously awaiting a decision from congress, if the program DACA ends these young immigrants would be deportable, and there's many questions going through their minds, and one of them is “where will I go?”, majority of them were brought to the U.S as babies and this is the only home they ever known, imagine mentally
According to the article written about the failures of the Dream Act, an incident occurred on November 6, a young man named Juan Manuel Montes was imprisoned by Border Patrol for being an undocumented immigrant in the United States. “He was the first recipient of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program to have been deported by the Trump administration” (Failure to Pass the Dream Act Would Be a Moral Crisis, 2017). Many reporters say that Mr. Montes’s detention and deportation was only a sign of what could happen in the future. It has been around over two months since President Trump declared the end to the Dream Act. While President Barack Obama was in office, he protected Dreamers because he understood and empathized with their struggles.
This program allows children brought to America illegally to obtain driver’s license, enroll in college, find legal jobs, pay income taxes, and also serve in the military without the fear of being deported to their country. More than thousands of people could lose their jobs if DACA is taken away forever. It could also cause more than 800,000 dreamers to be uncertain about their future and the possibility of being deported. Following is a Juan Escalante’s story of how and why his family he decided to come to America with his family. “I remember the day I found out I was undocumented. I got a call from an admissions office from a university I had applied to. They wanted to see a green card. I was extremely embarrassed. My mother just started crying. She just started apologizing and told me that it was her fault and that she wanted a better future of us.”. When Juan Escalante was 11 years old, his family and him came to the United States from Venezuela, where life had become dangerous. “We were driving and we stopped at a red light. A man approaches our car and he told my
So why is it necessary to keep these “dreamers” from living their dream? During Trump’s presidential campaign, he promised to reverse Obama’s “unconstitutional executive actions.” Republicans did not forget this promise and felt it necessary to take actions into their own hands. So they [Republicans] threatened to sue the federal government over DACA if the President didn’t cancel it by September 5th. Thus, leaving us where we are today: Trump putting an end to DACA and giving Congress 6 months to pass new laws in place of
Obama Administration has created federal programs that benefit some undocumented immigrants. Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA was introduced in 2012. Similar to the DREAM Act in its requirements, DACA issues temporary legal presence to qualifying undocumented immigrants. They can apply for employment authorization as well (NILC 2015).
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) is an American immigration policy that allows certain undocumented immigrants who entered the country before their 16th birthday and before june 2007 to receive a renewable two years work permit and exemption from deportation. DACA does confer non-immigrants legal status but does not provide a pote to citizenship. The DACA program was formed through executive order by former president Barack Obama in 2012 and allows certain of people called Dreamer, who come to US illegally as minors to be protected from immediate deportion. Now Trump administration announced on tuesday the wind down of an obama era program is end.
When we were kids, we were told to dream big so we can be whatever we want to be. However, President Donald Trump wants to remove an action that protects kids who immigrated to the U.S. of a young age (dreamers). This decision has affected many kids and young adults who work and go to school. DACA has helped many dreamers go to school, college, work, and most importantly has provided protection from deportation. Although these kids don’t have immigration papers, they are still considered dreamers and have the same desires as natural born Americans. Many of these kids are upset because they know they won’t be able to learn and have a career in their own country; it’s impossible.
This tweet is referencing the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or more commonly known as DACA. This immigration policy, formed in 2012 by the Obama administration, specifically targets people who illegally entered the US as children. These children, often times referred to as “Dreamers”, are protected from immediate deportation under DACA by granting them deferred action status as long as they meet the criteria of DACA. This status only lasts for two years, but recipients can renew their status. Those protected by DACA also receive work permits, and while
Perhaps the day of the termination of the DACA program (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) was a silent day for most of the people who have benefited from Obama’s policy to avoid deportation and be able to work and study inside the US. The silence is attributed to the fear and uncertainty, that old feeling that DREAMers experienced in a pre-DACA era—a time spent mostly under the shadows; a time that seems to prevail once again.
This CNN article provides a summary of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program and its potential future. The article reveals that DACA is a program in which it allows undocumented immigrants, who were brought to the United States as a child, to receive a deferral from deportation and a work permit. Although the deferral expires after two years, recipients could apply for a renewal. Over the time of the program, almost 800 thousand people requested a renewal of the deferral. This program made significant impacts on the Dreamers, the recipients of DACA, as they were able to live a normal life without the fear of being deported at any second. President Trump’s opinion regarding DACA differs from time to time: during the campaign,
the Dreamers are those who've been identified as immigrants who were brought over the border when they were children. For years advocates plead for the government to pardon the young Mexican migrants from deportation, on the grounds that it wasn't their choice to violate the law, and thus, ought to be allowed to continue pursuing their dreams in the U.S. un-infringed upon by ICE officials. The term Dreamers was coined after President Obama signed the (D)eferred (A)ction for (C)hildhood (A)rrivals act protecting such youth in 2012. Trump reiterated on Friday that his administration is "not after the dreamers, we are after the