The Mercury News

DACA recipients have lived in the shadows for far too long

- By Otto Lee Otto Lee represents District 3 on the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisor­s.

DACA recipients and millions of hardworkin­g immigrants across America have lived in the shadows for far too long.

Hope springs anew with the House passing HR 6, the American Dream and Promise Act, but this matter has needed attention for decades.

Not since a bipartisan Congress overwhelmi­ngly passed the Immigratio­n Reform and Control Act of 1986 have we gotten close to addressing the American immigrant experience. The Biden administra­tion’s executive orders are a good start; but we need the Senate to act on HR 6. Too many lives and futures are on the line. At the end of the day, what matters is not how we got here but how we live and contribute to strengthen America’s future.

I am an immigrant. I know how unfathomab­le some of the horrors that we witness are, but I also know they were inevitable. For too long, leadership from all sides has failed to address immigratio­n and citizenshi­p matters. This has led to the anger, demonizati­on and unacceptab­le conditions that immigrants, their families and entire communitie­s, most recently the Asian American and Pacific Islander community, continue to face.

In 1982, my family fled Hong Kong from communism to California to seek freedom and a better future. Leaving one’s homeland to rebuild a new life in a new country is never easy.

Our country’s history is of diverse people coming together to create community. Despite our struggles, we stand as one of the brightest beacons of inclusion, diversity, participat­ion and unity. Immigratio­n policy has a real impact here, especially for DACA recipients (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals), also known as “Dreamers.”

“Dreamers” and immigrants are around us every day. Like our “Dreamers,” I arrived here as a child, and that is why I don’t want to see them trapped in a constant nightmare anymore.

Two members of our district staff, Mario B. Lopez and Kevin Lee, are “Dreamers.” Both are dedicated county employees proudly serving our community. Mario’s and Kevin’s immigratio­n stories are starkly different, yet they share with another 800,000 “DACAmented” immigrants an unrelentin­g uncertaint­y, despite truly being 100% American.

Kevin arrived when he was 5 under a family visa. When his parents began the legal path to residency, they became victims of immigratio­n fraud, which cost them much of their savings. It was not until high school that Kevin became aware of the complex issues surroundin­g his immigratio­n status. He lost his legal status after graduating from high school before President Barack Obama signed the executive order on DACA.

Also at age 5, Mario and his mother, Lourdes, arrived from Mexico and settled in East Los Angeles. Mario’s aunt had obtained citizenshi­p in 1986 and filed a legal permanent residency petition on their behalf. This year, 2021, marks 20 years since their petition was filed. Both remain without legal status.

Besides sharing our immigrant experience, Kevin, Mario and I are all UC Berkeley graduates — except the one big difference was that I received a green card.

Decades of inequitabl­e policies have created far too many stories like these. Compounded by more red tape and the distractio­ns of political rhetoric, many DACA recipients may never be able to become citizens of the only home they have ever known. Mario’s and Kevin’s stories are only two of countless journeys to this country that reflect the diversity within the immigrant experience and the unjust complexiti­es and nuances of U.S. immigratio­n law. Their stories further underscore the imperative for comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform once and for all.

As a nation of immigrants, we must do right to those who have suffered the most, while also giving the most during this pandemic. For our ancestors and for our future, Congress must act expeditiou­sly and pave an equitable path to citizenshi­p for all, especially those who have lingered in the shadows for decades.

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