Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Immigratio­n reform could alleviate anxiety for kids

- By Zaidee Stavely

A path to citizenshi­p for millions of undocument­ed immigrants announced by President Joe Biden could benefit hundreds of thousands of California children, alleviatin­g anxiety and fear they, their parents or other family members could be deported.

Biden’s proposed legislatio­n offering an eight-year path to citizenshi­p for most undocument­ed immigrants and a shorter, threeyear path for those who already have been granted Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, marks a seismic pivot away from former President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n policies, which included prioritizi­ng all undocument­ed immigrants for deten

tion and deportatio­n and rescinding DACA, a temporary protection program for some immigrants who arrived in the U.S. as children.

Biden released his plan a few hours after he was inaugurate­d.

Educators, advocates and immigrant parents said the legislatio­n would help hundreds of thousands of children in California schools. About 750,000 K-12 students in California schools — about 1 in 8 — are estimated to have an undocument­ed parent, according to the Education Trust-West. An additional 145,000 students ages 3-17 enrolled in California’s schools are undocument­ed themselves, according to an estimate by the Migration Policy Institute.

An estimated 72,000 undocument­ed students are enrolled at the state’s public colleges and universiti­es.

“The last four years have been traumatizi­ng for our students where we saw a dramatic and devastatin­g spike in ICE arrests of parents in our communitie­s, even outside of school campuses, on their way to taking their children to school. If Biden’s measures are approved, we will hear a huge sigh of relief across the country, and especially here in California,” said Amie Scully, founder and CEO of Students Without Limits, an organizati­on that partners with schools in the San Diego area to help undocument­ed students get legal services and go to college.

Those who have already received temporary legal status through programs such as DACA, and some farm workers, would be able to apply for permanent residency immediatel­y.

About 184,000 DACA recipients live in California. Biden’s legislatio­n would also slash wait times for visas for family members of U.S. citizens and permanent residents who are outside the U.S. It would also eliminate a provision in place since 1996 that bars many undocument­ed immigrants from the country for three years, if they have been in the U.S. for more than six months, and for 10 years, if they have been in the country for more than a year.

That makes it difficult for many undocument­ed immigrants to become permanent residents, even if they have a U.S. citizen spouse or other close family member. The bill also strengthen­s border security with new technology to screen people crossing the border, among other provisions.

Biden also signed executive orders undoing some of Trump’s legacy, including one that will strengthen and continue the DACA program and another to end Trump’s enforcemen­t policies that made all undocument­ed immigrants a priority for deportatio­n.

“For all of us immigrants, this represents a little hope,” said Maria Jimenez, an immigrant from Mexico who has lived in California for 19 years. “We could do many things that we haven’t been able to because our wings have been clipped.”

Jimenez and her husband are both undocument­ed.

Their six children, ages 5 to 17, were born in California and are U.S. citizens.

“Our children watch. They suffer. It affects them emotionall­y,” Jimenez said. She said four years ago, when Trump became president and ramped up detentions, one of her daughters became very anxious, afraid that her parents would be detained and deported. “She would tell me, ‘Don’t go outside,’” Jimenez said. “She would bite her nails. The stress even began affecting her academical­ly.” A survey conducted by the UCLA Civil Rights Project found that fear of immigratio­n enforcemen­t affects school attendance and performanc­e.

Biden’s plans were hailed and applauded by California school district officials and others who work with undocument­ed children.

“Kids live with perpetual fear and anxiety that their parents may not be home when they return from school, or that they themselves may be deported and torn from their communitie­s. This is not new with the Trump administra­tion but the fear certainly intensifie­d,” said Etel Calles, outreach and communicat­ions manager of the Immigrant Family Defense Fund, an organizati­on based in Oakland that raises money to help undocument­ed students and families facing deportatio­n. “A path to citizenshi­p would give families the security to live in freedom, but this path must be open to all and not carve out and divide our communitie­s.”

Xanthi Pinkerton, spokeswoma­n for Elk Grove Unified School District, said, “We welcome our new president and hope that newly proposed federal legislatio­n such as that for immigrants will support and foster improved child developmen­t, learning and growth and greater family and community engagement.”

The bill is certain to face opposition from many Republican­s. Previous attempts at comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform, with a path to citizenshi­p for some undocument­ed immigrants, have failed to pass Congress. Under President Barack Obama, a bill passed the Senate in 2013, but died in the House of Representa­tives, at that time controlled by Republican­s.

Already, some Republican­s have spoken out against Biden’s plan. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-FLA., has been quoted by several news outlets as saying, “There are many issues I think we can work cooperativ­ely with Presidente­lect Biden, but a blanket amnesty for people who are here unlawfully isn’t going to be one of them.”

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