Chicago Sun-Times

As the Supreme Court considers DACA, my future in the U.S. hangs in the balance

- BY FERNANDA HERRERA SPIELER

On Nov. 12 of last year, I sat in the courtroom of the U.S. Supreme Court and listened to opening statements about the legal status of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals.

The fate of DACA, a federal program that gives young undocument­ed immigrants brought to this country as children the legal right to work and live here, hung in the balance. As a recipient of these protection­s, so did my future.

When Justice Sonia Sotomayor said “this is not about the law, this is about our choice to destroy lives,” the room gasped. Tears filled my eyes.

In that moment I knew that at least one justice understood the stakes: If the court rules in favor of the Trump administra­tion, which has been trying to end DACA since 2017, 800,000 young people, myself included, could be deported.

We won’t know the Supreme Court’s decision until spring, so I’m facing months of uncertaint­y. Unfortunat­ely, it’s a familiar feeling. From the time I was born in Mexico, my life has been one Hail Mary pass after another.

Back in Guadalajar­a, my family ran a grocery store. It was robbed repeatedly, and one night I was almost kidnapped. Were it not for my grandfathe­r saving me, I might not be alive today. After that, my parents made their own Hail Mary pass to keep our family safe by moving us to Gadsden, Alabama. I was 2.

Although we finally were free of the gangs who’d terrorized us, growing up in an American state with some of the strictest immigratio­n laws in the country meant that we were always getting by on a prayer. I was a good student, but I didn’t know if I could go to college; Alabama is one of two states that prohibit undocument­ed immigrants from enrolling in state universiti­es.

Luckily, the summer before my senior year, DACA was announced. My Social Security number arrived days before college applicatio­ns were due.

I graduated with a degree in internatio­nal relations from Samford University in 2017. But Trump had announced he was ending DACA, and my dream of becoming a lawyer no longer seemed possible. Even if I could find a way to pay for law school without access to federal aid, I might not be able to remain in the country to finish or become licensed.

I took a gap year, volunteeri­ng with a local immigrant-rights advocacy group and babysittin­g to support myself. In the end, I decided to take advantage while the opportunit­y remained available and applied to study law at Loyola University Chicago. I was offered a full ride as a member of the school’s first law class to accept Dreamers.

This is the life of Dreamers: Having hopes, dreams and a drive to achieve, but having no assurance or long-term support to make it happen. And yet, in spite of all the instabilit­y, those of us who are eligible for DACA have accomplish­ed so much. More than 80% of us have taken some college courses, according to the immigratio­n nonprofit New American Economy. Ninety percent of us are employed, filling high-skilled jobs in health care and education, as well as manual and service positions in constructi­on and hospitalit­y.

With the $19.9 billion in income we generate annually, $3 billion goes to taxes, leaving us with $16.8 billion in spending power. Illinois gets a big chunk of that; our state’s DACA-eligible residents generate $1.2 billion of income.

Clearly, Dreamers aren’t the only ones who benefit from our presence in this country. From the employers who hire us to the businesses we support, Americans reap rewards too.

To make us leave the only country most of us have ever known isn’t just cruel. It is also, as Justice Sotomayor said, economical­ly and civically shortsight­ed.

 ?? DANIEL SLIM/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? The U.S. Supreme Court Building on Sunday.
DANIEL SLIM/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES The U.S. Supreme Court Building on Sunday.

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