Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Gov. Asa Hutchinson,

Will help DACA recipients

- JOHN MORITZ

joined Monday by members of the immigrant advocacy group Arkansas United, signs House Bill 1735, conferring the opportunit­y for all immigrants with Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program or equivalent work permits to get profession­al licenses in Arkansas.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson signed legislatio­n Monday allowing immigrants with federal work permits to receive occupation­al and profession­al licenses in Arkansas.

House Bill 1735 is the latest in a string of workforce measures passed with bipartisan support in the Legislatur­e addressing immigrants and recipients of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, program.

In 2019, lawmakers took action to allow DACA recipients to obtain nursing licenses, and earlier this year a similar bill was passed with regard to teacher’s licenses. HB1735 would apply to dozens of other occupation­al licenses governed by the state.

“We need those services and it allows that door of opportunit­y to go to them,” Hutchinson said of the immigrants who would be affected by the bill.

Mireya Reith, the executive director of the immigrant-focused nonprofit group Arkansas United, said more than 5,000 Arkansans benefit from the DACA program.

One of the sponsors of HB1735, Rep. Clint Penzo, R-Springdale, said the bill will help the state address worker shortages.

“Right now, there’s constructi­on workers and health care [worker shortages] so those will all be accommo dated under this,” Penzo said.

The legislatio­n was passed by super-majorities in both the House and Senate.

In a Senate committee last week, Little Rock Central High School senior Javier Luna testified that the bill would help him fulfill his goal of becoming a profession­al civil engineer. After his testimony, which was praised by lawmakers, the committee unanimousl­y voted to advance the bill.

Luna also attended a signing ceremony for the bill Monday in the governor’s conference room, where he posed for pictures with Hutchinson and the bill’s sponsors.

“I honestly didn’t know that engineers needed a license for us to be able to work, so it wasn’t until this bill opened my eyes to that, [that] I took the opportunit­y to come and share my story,” Luna said. “Thanks to that I can go study what I want to do.”

The law will go into effect 90 days after the Legislatur­e adjourns later this month. The bill had no act number assigned yet, according to the legislativ­e website Monday evening.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) ??
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford)

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