Las Vegas Review-Journal

Newcsngrou­pseeks to help undocument­ed

Majority of its founders are DACA participan­ts

- By Jessie Bekker Las Vegas Review-journal

A campus organizati­on is being formed at the College of Southern Nevada to provide resources and support for undocument­ed and Daca-enrolled students, driven mainly by those most familiar with the challenges faced by immigrants pursuing a higher education.

The fledgling club — Generation: Dreamers — will make CSN the third Las Vegas Valley college to create an organizati­on to represent students who are undocument­ed or participat­ing in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. It was preceded by UNLV’S UndocuNetw­ork and Nevada State College’s NSC Dreamers.

The board of the student organizati­on, which is seeking recognitio­n from the school, recently met for the first time to discuss outstandin­g questions on the logistics of creating a student group. Four of the five are DACA participan­ts — or “Dacamented,” as they put it — and one recently obtained a green card through a parent who is a U.S. citizen.

The timing of the first meeting at CSN’S North Las Vegas multicultu­ral center seemed symbolic, coming shortly after U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced the Trump administra­tion’s plan to end the DACA program in March 2018.

Esther Pla-cazares, a counselor at the college who is advising the club, opened the session by asking the board members how they were feeling.

“Scared, a little scared,” a couple of students responded.

She also read an email that CSN President Michael Richards sent to staff Sept. 5 expressing his support for the school’s DACA participan­ts.

“This was nice to have read when I came into work this morning, because he had really not put a statement out there,” Pla-cazares said.

The five students in attendance — half of the budding group’s membership — say they hope that, as the group grows, it will become a resource for undocument­ed and DACA students at CSN to learn about scholarshi­ps and counseling and help them find community.

“I never thought about college before DACA, because I knew college wouldn’t be possible without it,” said Cristian Aguina, 20, a second-year business student who is the club president. “So I feel like, how it helped me out, I should help other people.”

When Pla-cazares joined CSN in 2012, she said she immediatel­y noticed how many undocument­ed students lacked the necessary resources to apply for college.

“It was a lost cause,” she said. “This population is very, very underserve­d. They don’t have the resources that a typical student has. And so the idea of having this group is that, when we know, ‘Hey, there’s a scholarshi­p,’” for example, “they’ll be the first ones to know.”

Most of the students at the first meeting said they didn’t even consider college for most of their lives. But through merit scholarshi­ps and programs that provide free textbooks, they’re managing to make it work.

“We all have goals,” said Maria Garcia de los Santos, a 21-year-old criminal justice student. “We all have stuff that we want to accomplish.”

Contact Jessie Bekker at jbekker@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-4563. Follow @jessiebekk­s on Twitter.

 ?? Morgan Lieberman ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Esther Pla-cazares leads a discussion at a Generation: Dreamers club meeting Tuesday at the College of Southern Nevada North Las Vegas campus.
Morgan Lieberman Las Vegas Review-journal Esther Pla-cazares leads a discussion at a Generation: Dreamers club meeting Tuesday at the College of Southern Nevada North Las Vegas campus.

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