Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

TEMPORARY RESIDENCY

They grew up legally in the U.S. but can’t stay after they turn 21

- By Aishvarya Kavi

WASHINGTON — In 2011, after five years of working and living with his family in the United States on a temporary visa, Barathi-mohan Ganesan applied for green cards for his wife, his 5-year-old daughter and his 11-year-old son.

Mr. Ganesan, who was born in India and has also lived in Singapore and Australia, was nervous about when his wife and children might gain permanent residency. He knew the waiting list was especially long for Indians on his kind of visa, an H-1B, which allows American companies to employ skilled foreign workers. Because of chronic backlogs, it can take years to process those on work visas who apply for permanent residency.

Last year, a decade after he applied, Mr. Ganesan, his wife and his daughter received their green cards. But his son had turned 21 and missed the cutoff by months, leaving him scrambling for a visa that would allow him to stay in the United States.

Mr. Ganesan’s son is among more than 200,000 children who grew up in the country under the protection of their parents’ temporary visas, which can be renewed indefinite­ly. But the children risk losing their legal status when they turn 21. Unable to become permanent residents because of the backlogs or because they were never eligible, they must obtain a different visa, remain in the United States without legal status or leave entirely. According to the Cato Institute, more than 10,000 children age out of green-card eligibilit­y each year; untold numbers eventually depart, often leaving their families behind.

These young people do not qualify for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. Created by executive action during the Obama administra­tion, the DACA programpro­tects from deportatio­n about 650,000 youths, or Dreamers, who were brought into the U.S. and have remained without legal status. Because the program requires applicants to be undocument­ed, it does not offer those with legal status a way to stay.

A comprehens­ive immigratio­n overhaul is highly unlikely to pass a deadlocked Congress in a midterm election year. The Biden administra­tion has been under increasing pressure as a Donald Trump-era public health order, known as Title 42, is set to be lifted in late May, a move that is expected to create a surge of migration across the southweste­rn border. A bipartisan group of senators restarted immigratio­n discussion­s Thursday to try to identify stand-alone proposals that would have the support of both parties.

Asked whether the administra­tion — which is updating DACA — was considerin­g extending protection­s to documented youths, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas told the House Judiciary Committee that the department did not plan to do so. Its focus was “to fortify the

existing DACA program” and shift responsibi­lity for documented youths to Congress, he said, adding that their situation spoke to “the imperative to pass immigratio­n reform.”

In interviews, more than a dozen people who lived in the United States on temporary visas from a young age described their struggles with anxiety and the financial burden of navigating how to remain in the country they considered home. They are urging the Biden administra­tion, if it will not provide a path to citizenshi­p, to offer a way for them to remain in the country legally.

Mr. Ganesan’s son, Niranjan Barathimoh­an, is able to stay in the United States until November only because immigratio­n officials extended his dependent visa. Mr. Barathimoh­an, a student at the University of Texas at Dallas, will have to go to Singapore, where he was born, to apply for a student visa that will allow him

to return to finish his degree.

His applicatio­n might be rejected; since he previously tried for a green card, he has shown an intent to immigrate to the United States, which is not allowed. Applicants may be asked to show that they intend to leave the country after completing their courses. Mr. Barathimoh­an faces the prospect of being stuck in Singapore, where he has no family or roots.

“How is he going to manage alone?” Mr. Ganesan said. “I was really devastated that just because of my country of birth, my son’s opportunit­ies are very limited.”

Although there are protection­s to keep families together when parents move to the United States on temporary work visas, those end when children turn 21 because they are no longer considered part of the family unit.

“I don’t think people who originally wrote the laws foresaw a situation where children brought here on visas would be raised and educated here, but not have a clear opportunit­y to stay and become Americans,” said Dip Patel, founder of Improve the Dream, an organizati­on that campaigns for a path to citizenshi­p for them. “Delay in taking action will not only lead to tearing more families apart, but also continue the immense emotional turmoil faced by

thousands of families.”

Other families face similar situations. Like Mr. Ganesan, Deva and her husband moved their children to the United States from India when they were young. For more than a decade, the children and Deva, who asked to be identified by a nickname, lived as dependents on her husband’s indefinite work visa.

Deva said her husband’s employer, an American automaker, could decide at any point not to extend his visa, which must be renewed every three years. She said she feared antagonizi­ng the employer if she was known to speak publicly about her family’s situation.

The family’s hopes of staying together in the United States ended in December, when Deva’s daughter turned 21. Having exhausted appeals for an extension and unable to apply for a different visa, the daughter moved to Canada days later.

The effects on the family were far-reaching. A week before her daughter was set to leave, Deva said, her son, now 17, tried to hurt himself, alarming his sister. She postponed her departure by a week while the family sought counseling for him.

Deva’s son said during counseling that he had struggled with his mental health for months while watching his family navigate their legal status, she said. Her daughter, who enrolled in a master’s program in Canada, is less than an hour’s drive from her friends and family but cannot enter the United States while she waits for a tourist visa.

At a Senate hearing in March, Sen. Dick Durbin, DIll., chair of the Judiciary Committee, and Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, top GOP member on the panel’s immigratio­n subcommitt­ee, vowed to work on legislatio­n to help people who had grown up in the United States without a clear path to citizenshi­p.

In emotional testimony at the hearing, Athulya Rajakumar, 23, spoke of the toll of growing up in Seattle as a dependent of her single mother, who had a temporary work visa. She described how she and her brother struggled with depression and how her family’s status as temporary visa holders hindered him from receiving the treatment he needed. He later took his own life.

“We didn’t know how badly it was going to affect us,” Ms. Rajakumar, who lives in Texas on a work visa, said in an interview.

Muzaffar Chishti, director of the Migration Policy Institute at the New York University School of Law, described the issue as one of many in a system that has not been truly updated since theImmigra­tion and Nationalit­y Act of 1952, which establishe­d the pathways for legal immigratio­n that are still in place.

Those who grew up in the United States on certain temporary visas are not eligible to apply for permanent residency. That was the case for Summer Rusher, who was born in Britain and moved to Florida at age 1 with her parents and arrived on an investor visa, which allows some foreign citizens to reside in the country indefinite­ly if they invest in an American business. The program does not offer a path to citizenshi­p, meaning children have no way to become permanent residents.

Ms. Rusher, 23, was able to stay on a student visa after she turned 21. She graduated from Southeaste­rn University at the top of her class in a master’s program for exceptiona­l-student education, a certificat­ion in Florida for instructor­s of students with disabiliti­es.

Now a teacher in Winter Haven, Fla., Ms. Rusher was among a large pool of applicants for a limited number of work visas. But she learned in March that she was not chosen in the randomized process used by U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services. If she cannot obtain another visa before her work authorizat­ion expires in June, she will have to return to Britain, where her qualificat­ions are not recognized.

“I got to do everything that a typical American kid would dream of,” Ms. Rusher said. “I don’t want that to end just because of where I was born.”

 ?? Eve Edelheit/The New York Times ?? Summer Rusher, who was born in Britain and grew up in the United States with her parents, had an investor visa that offers no path to citizenshi­p. Children of temporary visa holders who can’t gain permanent residency are one of several groups urging the Biden administra­tion to act on an immigratio­n overhaul.
Eve Edelheit/The New York Times Summer Rusher, who was born in Britain and grew up in the United States with her parents, had an investor visa that offers no path to citizenshi­p. Children of temporary visa holders who can’t gain permanent residency are one of several groups urging the Biden administra­tion to act on an immigratio­n overhaul.
 ?? Eve Edelheit/The New York Times ?? Barathimoh­an Ganesan, left, and his son, Niranjan Barathimoh­an, in Frisco, Texas. When he turned 21 last year, Niranjan was scrambling for a visa that would allow him to stay in the United States.
Eve Edelheit/The New York Times Barathimoh­an Ganesan, left, and his son, Niranjan Barathimoh­an, in Frisco, Texas. When he turned 21 last year, Niranjan was scrambling for a visa that would allow him to stay in the United States.

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