Windsor Star

’Dreamers’ unlikely to head north: experts

- MAURA FORREST With files from The Canadian Press National Post mforrest@postmedia.com Twitter.com/MauraForre­st

Canadians shouldn’t expect another flood of asylum seekers to illegally cross the border in the wake of the Trump administra­tion’s decision to scrap a program designed to protect young, undocument­ed immigrants in the United States, immigratio­n experts say.

The situation of the roughly 800,000 so-called Dreamers, undocument­ed immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children, is very different from that of the Haitians and other asylum seekers who’ve been coming to Canada in large numbers via irregular border crossings, said Ottawa immigratio­n lawyer Ronalee Carey.

For one thing, it’s still unclear whether the Dreamers will actually face deportatio­n from the U.S. once the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program ends six months from now.

“If I was a DACA recipient, I would not be trying to come to Canada irregularl­y,” Carey said. “I think they should sit tight and wait and see what happens.”

U.S. President Donald Trump has given Congress six months to come up with a solution for the Dreamers, so-called because of the proposed DREAM Act, voted down in the Senate in 2010, which would have offered them legal status in exchange for joining the military or attending college. DACA is a stop-gap measure, implemente­d by the Obama administra­tion, that has shielded the Dreamers from deportatio­n but has not given them a path to citizenshi­p.

On Tuesday evening, Trump tweeted that he will “revisit this issue” if Congress is unable to “legalize DACA” in the next six months. A majority of Americans believe Dreamers, many of whom have grown up speaking English and have attended American universiti­es, should be allowed to stay in the U.S.

Carey said it would be a “huge mess” if the Trump administra­tion actually tried to deport the 800,000 undocument­ed young people.

“That was a smart tweet on his part to sort of take back a little bit,” she said.

If some DACA recipients do head north, they will be very unlikely to meet the criteria for refugee status in Canada, she said. But some could come to Canada through normal immigratio­n streams, like the Express Entry program for skilled workers, which would give them a path to permanent residence. Others could come as internatio­nal students if they have the money, Carey said. In fact, at least one Canadian post-secondary institutio­n is already trying to capitalize on the opportunit­y. Huron University College, in London, Ont., announced Wednesday it will be offering a $50,000 scholarshi­p for students affected by the DACA decision.

Even if some Dreamers do decide to brave the odds and seek refugee status in Canada, most wouldn’t need to cross the border illegally to do so, she said, because of an exception in the Safe Third Country Agreement.

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