Chicago Sun-Times

LOCAL REACTION,

- BY TAYLOR HARTZ Staff Reporter Email: thartz@suntimes.com Twitter: @ TaylorJHar­tz

On the eve of what is expected to be the end of the “Dreamers” program, more than 40,000 young Illinois residents are unsure of what the future holds for the lives they have built here.

In a statement outside the Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t office in Chicago on Monday, Bladamir Caballero, 18, said Dreamers have been left feeling “like slaves on the auction block,” as they await a decision on the program — and their futures.

President Donald Trump’s announceme­nt, expected Tuesday, will likely bring an end to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, with a six- month delay. The program was installed through an executive order from President Barack Obama in 2012, and according to U. S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, has offered protection to 800,000 illegal immigrants in the U. S. who were brought into the country before the age of 16.

According to the Illinois Business Immigratio­n Coalition, 42,400 DACA recipients call Illinois home. Caballero is just one of them.

“This is not ‘ The Art of the Deal’ with the lives of human beings,” Caballero said at a rally on Monday. “We will not be removed from this land.”

The high school senior came to the United States with his mother when he was just 2 years old and now lives in Cicero with his mother, who is undocument­ed, and his father and sister who are U. S. citizens, said Emma Lozano, the family’s pastor at Lincoln United Methodist Church.

“His support system is here, he has no one in Honduras,” Lozano said. “He can’t even consider going back.”

Teenage Dreamers in Lozano’s parish have suffered from intense anxiety over what will happen to their families. In a little over a year, said Lozano, two teens have attempted suicide when their parents faced deportatio­n.

“They just can’t see what their life would be or how they would survive without their mom,” Lozano said.

Now with the impending end of DACA, Lozano said “the anxiety and the stress is just going to continue to spill over,” for young immigrants.

Immigratio­n organizati­ons throughout Chicago say they are hoping for more clarity about what exactly the end of DACA will entail, and how quickly it will come.

“It’s all up in the air, which has almost a million young people uncertain about their futures,” said Sara Walker of Familia Latina Unida and MoralMonda­ys.

“It’s horrible for all these young people,” Walker said. “What are they going to do?”

According to the Illinois Business Immigratio­n Coalition, 36,000 Dreamers are members of the Illinois workforce, with many more still in school or pursuing higher education.

The coalition, which wrote an open letter to the president on Friday, which gathered 470 signatures from businesses as big as Facebook, said that ending DACA would result in a $ 2.3 billion loss in GDP in Illinois over the next decade. The Center for American Progress estimates a loss of $ 460 billion from the national GDP in the same time.

“It doesn’t make sense economical­ly, and it certainly doesn’t make sense from a humanitari­an perspectiv­e,” Walker said.

The coalition’s letter collected over 100 signatures from Illinois companies and institutio­ns.

Northweste­rn University President Morton Schapiro added his signature and spoke out against the deportatio­n of students.

“It makes no sense to expel talented young people who have been raised as Americans,” Schapiro said. “We need their knowledge and skills to build our economy and defend our nation.”

 ?? | RICHARD VOGEL/ AP ?? A young supporter of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals holds a sign Monday during a rally in downtown Los Angeles.
| RICHARD VOGEL/ AP A young supporter of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals holds a sign Monday during a rally in downtown Los Angeles.

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