Editorial
The U.S.
program allowing young illegal immigrants to apply for work permits is an
important move in the right direction. Lawmakers' claims leveled against it are
unfounded.
August 19, 2012
Last week featured a rare moment of encouragement in the
nation's often tiresome and vindictive immigration debate: Thousands of young
undocumented immigrants began applying for temporary permits that will allow
them to live and work legally in the United States . The Deferred Action
for Childhood Arrivals program, the result of a policy shift unveiled by the
Obama administration in June, is a small but significant step that could help
more than a million immigrant students and military veterans who were brought
to this country illegally as children and who have lived in fear of deportation
since.
But leave it to anti-immigration zealots to find a cloud in
this silver lining. For them, any measure of relief for illegal immigrants is
too much. Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Texas), for instance, used the week's events to
suggest that the program amounted to amnesty and would cost taxpayers millions
of dollars to implement.
Neither claim is true.
The program doesn't provide a path to legalization for those
young immigrants, as the Dream Act, which failed to win approval in Congress,
would have done. Instead, it grants a two-year respite from deportation for
those who meet various conditions. They must be under 31, have come to the United States
before they turned 16 and lived here for at least five years, and have no
serious criminal convictions. They also must be enrolled in school, or have
graduated from high school or served in theU.S. military. If their applications
are granted, they will not be deported for two years, but they do not receive
citizenship.
Nor does the program require taxpayers to foot the bill for
the application process or for budget shortfalls. Eligible immigrants are
required to pay $465 to cover the costs of processing their applications and
the fee waivers granted to those living in foster care or acute poverty.
Moreover, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the Department of Homeland
Security agency administering the program, is funded almost entirely by fees
paid by immigrants seeking visas or green cards and employers sponsoring workers.
Less than 4% of the agency's budget is funded by taxpayers. Smith and his
fellow Republicans know that.
Finally, critics who worry that immigrants will file
fraudulent applications should consider that those applying must provide
documents provided by U.S.
institutions, such as public schools and the military, as evidence. Surely, the
Department of Homeland Security can handle that.
Smith is right about one thing, however. This stopgap
measure isn't enough to address the country's immigration problems. Only
Congress can do that.
See the entire article at latimes.com/news/opinion/editorials/la-ed-applications-deferred-action-20120819,0,2939764.story
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