USA TODAY International Edition

President Biden, don’t let me be deported

Strengthen DACA to protect ‘ Dreamers’ from court attacks

- Mitzi Colin Lopez Mitzi Colin Lopez is an immigratio­n advocate working in Pennsylvan­ia.

I had the honor of being invited to attend the State of the Union address as the guest of first lady Jill Biden because I am a beneficiary of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, created by President Barack Obama more than 10 years ago to protect people like me who were brought here without documentat­ion as children.

DACA has changed my life and the lives of hundreds of thousands of other “Dreamers” who have lived in the United States for nearly all of our lives and consider this country our home.

I was born in Mexico City, and my parents brought me here when I was 3 years old. Since then I have lived in Coatesvill­e, Pennsylvan­ia, where I grew up alongside my brother and sister, both of whom are fortunate enough to be U. S. citizens. My parents and I, however, are not citizens, and as a result, we have always lived in fear that our family would be torn apart.

Fear has driven me to become an advocate for undocument­ed Americans

My parents prepared us from a young age for what to do in the event that one or both of them was detained for deportatio­n. It is this fear, which I have lived with for as long as I can remember, that drove me to become an advocate not only for DACA recipients but for all of the approximat­ely 11 million undocument­ed Americans.

My parents have always worked hard, paid their taxes and have spent thousands of dollars on lawyers to try to gain a path to citizenshi­p – only to be told that it is impossible.

The creation of DACA at least allowed my parents not to worry that I would be separated from my siblings, but the program is now under attack in the federal courts, and I fear that I will once again be forced to live in fear that the life I have built for myself in America will be abruptly taken away from me.

I worked hard, graduating with honors from West Chester University, and found work with a nonprofit that works to support the immigrant community. I am engaged, and I look forward to being able to start a family here in the only home I have ever known.

DACA has enabled me to come so far in life, and it would be unfathomab­ly cruel to erase because of a court ruling all the hard work that I and others have done to build a life.

Time is running out on our American dream

There have been multiple attempts to codify DACA into law, and provide permanent protection­s, including a path to citizenshi­p for us, but they have failed every time.

The Dream Act recently was again introduced in the Senate, but the prospects of legislatio­n passing both chambers of Congress are not bright, and time is running out on our opportunit­y to continue our pursuit of the American dream.

It would be incredible if Congress would finally act to give us the protection­s we deserve, but I realize that is highly unlikely, at least before the courts have a chance to act. I appreciate President Joe Biden’s commitment to DACA recipients and to creating a fairer, more humane immigratio­n system in general, but time is running short and urgent action is desperatel­y needed right now.

President Obama created DACA through executive action because he also faced a Congress unwilling to move to enact these simple, commonsens­e protection­s, as President Biden well knows from his time as his vice president. President Biden’s words in support of DACA, and his gracious invitation for me to hear him speak, are much appreciate­d, but the time has come to take action.

And so I am calling on President Biden to live up to the lofty ideals he espouses in his rhetoric and match them with his actions. We are counting on him to step up when it matters most and use his executive authority to strengthen DACA, protect it from attacks in the federal courts – and allow us to continue pursuing our American dreams.

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