San Antonio Express-News

Keep Texas strong; pass Dream Act

- By Glenn Hamer Glenn Hamer is president and CEO of the Texas Associatio­n of Business.

As representa­tives of business organizati­ons across Texas, we thank congressio­nal members of both political parties seeking to fix our broken immigratio­n system. We remain committed to working with you to protect our nation’s Dreamers, and we urge the passage of the Dream Act of 2021.

For too long, our immigratio­n system has failed Texas’ businesses and communitie­s, even as immigrants have played crucial roles in our essential workforce and COVID-19 response.

Texas is home to more than 4.9 million immigrants — one of the largest immigrant population­s in the nation, according to census data. This includes more than 106,000 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, program recipients, who are young immigrants who came to the U.S. as children.

Congress must recognize the immense contributi­ons of the immigrant community in our state by providing an earned pathway to citizenshi­p for Dreamers.

The bipartisan Dream Act, recently reintroduc­ed by U.S. Sens. Dick Durbin, D-ill., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., would achieve just this. Providing Dreamers with an avenue toward an earned pathway to citizenshi­p would finally give DACA recipients and all those who rely on them muchneeded certainty following years of being stuck in legal limbo.

It would also ensure that Dreamers can continue working, paying taxes and living in the only nation they know as home.

We have an immense opportunit­y to finally push the Dream Act over the finish line — and it could not come at a more important time. About 30,600 DACA recipients are working in essential industries such as farming, health care, education and constructi­on.

In addition to their essential contributi­ons, DACA recipients are making immense economic contributi­ons.

If Texas’ DACA recipients were removed, it would result in an annual GDP loss of $6.1 billion, as well as the loss of the $244.7 million in state and

local taxes they pay annually, according to research by the Center for American Progress and Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy.

Nearly three-fourths of voters believe in protecting these young immigrants, according to a Pew Research Center poll. Though the Biden administra­tion has provided DACA recipients with temporary relief, the program is still at risk; a federal court ruling handed down by Judge Andrew Hanen in Houston could come at any minute.

We have a unique opportunit­y at hand to build a commonsens­e approach to immigratio­n that keeps families safe and together, grows our economy, supports our recovery and contribute­s to a robust workforce — and the time to act is now.

That is why we — the Texas Associatio­n of Business, Texas Business Leadership Council, San Antonio Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, North Texas Commission, Rio Grande Valley Partnershi­p and Greater Houston Partnershi­p — have come together to call on the Senate to immediatel­y provide a pathway to citizenshi­p for DACA recipients and Daca-eligible individual­s through the passage of the bipartisan Dream Act.

We understand that no bill is perfect, but we strongly believe this existing bipartisan bill is the best framework to protect Dreamers rather than starting over with new legislatio­n.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? The U.S. Senate should move the Dream Act across the finish line, providing crucial protection to immigrants who came to this country as children and call it home.
Associated Press file photo The U.S. Senate should move the Dream Act across the finish line, providing crucial protection to immigrants who came to this country as children and call it home.
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