By JULIA PRESTON
Published: August 15, 2012 CHICAGO — Tens of thousands of young illegal immigrants waited excitedly in lines as long as a mile and thronged to information sessions across the country on Wednesday, the first day that a federal immigration agency began accepting applications for deportation deferrals that include permits to work legally.
The public outpouring
surprised both federal officials and immigrant advocates, who had expected an
enthusiastic response to the Obama administration’s
deferral program but were unprepared for the size and intensity of
it. At Navy Pier here, young people began lining up on Tuesday evening for a
counseling session about the program that was organized by an immigrants’
rights group.
By midmorning
Wednesday, the line wound down the long pier, through a park and along an
expressway, with young people holding sheafs of documents that they hoped would
prove that they qualified for the program. By noon, event organizers said,
11,500 people had attended briefings, and more than 2,000 people had been
turned away because there was not enough time or staff to deal with them.
“I know that out there
many people are looking for the same thing as I am,” said Reyna Martinez, 19,
who has lived in the United
States since she was 7. “We are not alone;
we stand together as a big crowd.”
Thousands of
immigrants also waited in lines outside the offices of immigrants’ groups and
flooded churches and law offices in Los Angeles ,
Miami , New York ,
Boston and Houston ,
among other cities.
Many of the young
immigrants waiting at Navy Pier were wary — the program does not provide any
legal immigration status like a green card, and some would-be applicants
worried that there was a risk in coming forward so publicly — but they said any
progress toward a legal foothold in the United States would be worth it.
“I know there are a
lot of people without documentation who want to continue their school and work
and make a better life for their families,” said Darinca Barron, 17, who added
that she was brought here by her parents from Mexico when she was 6. “This is
just a chance that you have to take.”
Under the program, the
federal government will grant a two-year reprieve from deportation to illegal
immigrants who are under age 31, have been in this country since they were
children and meet other requirements.
President
Obama initiated the program on June 15 using his executive
authority. He did so after legislation known as the Dream Act — which he
supported and which would have given legal status to young immigrants — stalled
in Congress. He made broad use of his presidential powers, with as many as 1.7
million immigrants estimated to be eligible for deferrals.
The agency managing
the program, Citizenship and Immigration Services, had only 60 days to prepare
for the deluge of paperwork. The application form was first
published on the Internet on Tuesday afternoon. Officials at the
agency said on Wednesday that no major problems had been reported.
Immigrants must mail
in the applications, which include a request for the deportation deferral and
separate forms for a work permit. Agency officials and immigrant advocates have
warned young people that there will be no appeals of applications that are
denied, so they should have all their documents in order.
As a result, few
applications were submitted on Wednesday. Most immigrants who turned out were
seeking guidance about whether they would be eligible and what documents they
needed to prove that they met the requirements. At the session at Navy Pier —
famous for its Ferris wheel — organizers from the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant
and Refugee Rights set up rows of tables in a ballroom where dozens
of lawyers and volunteers offered free individual counseling.
Three prominent
Illinois Democrats, all longtime supporters of the Dream Act, gathered at Navy
Pier to mingle with the young immigrants and reap some of the political
benefits from Mr. Obama’s initiative.
One of them, Senator
Richard J. Durbin of Illinois ,
wrote the original Dream Act bill 11 years ago. Mr. Durbin, the Senate’s
second-ranking Democrat, said he was elated to see the huge crowd. “You can’t
stop this force,” Mr. Durbin said to applause from the immigrants. “This is a
force of people who have grown up in this country and want to be part of its
future. They are creating a moral force beyond a legal force.”
Another of the
Democrats, Representative Luis Gutierrez, compared the scene at Navy Pier to
the immigrants arriving at Ellis Island a
century ago. “While they saw New York City then,
today they see Chicago ,”
he said.
The third Democrat,
Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who was Mr. Obama’s White House chief of staff, announced
that the city had raised $275,000 in private donations for a college
scholarship fund for immigrants who were granted deferrals. Mr. Emanuel pressed
home his political point.
“Don’t let anybody
tell you on a day like today that who sits in that Oval Office does not
matter,” he said. Obama campaign strategists had hoped that halting the deportations
would help the president among Hispanics, whose votes could be pivotal in
several states.
Republicans have
criticized the deportation deferrals as a form of backdoor amnesty for
immigrants who broke the law. They say the effort to give work permits to so
many of them is poorly timed, with the unemployment rate at more than 8
percent.
Some states greeted
the initiative with less enthusiasm than Illinois .
In Arizona ,
Gov. Jan Brewer, issued an executive order on Wednesday barring immigrants who
are granted a reprieve from getting public benefits or obtaining drivers’
licenses.
She instructed state
agencies to carry out whatever changes were necessary to safeguard “the intent
of Arizona
voters and lawmakers,” who have passed laws and approved ballot initiatives
that prevent anyone other than legal residents from accessing taxpayer-financed
benefits.
In New York , the City Council announced that it
had set aside $3 million to provide free legal services to deferral applicants
through a network of community organizations.
“The City Council has
made this investment because we believe that undocumented immigrants have a
right to an education and a safe and productive life here in the U.S. ,” Speaker
Christine C. Quinn said.
Steven Yaccino
contributed reporting from Chicago, Fernanda Santos from Phoenix, and Kirk
Semple from New York .
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