Houston Chronicle

Bills are seen as good for migrants

- By Elizabeth Trovall STAFF WRITER

A recent report shows that if pending immigratio­n bills in Congress were passed, hundreds of thousands of undocument­ed immigrants in the Houston area could benefit and become legal residents or citizens, improving their quality of life.

The Center for Migration Studies, a New York-based immigratio­n think tank, found that if the American Dream and Promise Act of 2021 were to pass, 12 percent of greater Houston’s 576,500 undocument­ed immigrants — 70,600 people — would be eligible for green cards, allowing them to live and work in the U.S. with authorizat­ion and free from the threat of deportatio­n.

The bill would protect undocument­ed immigrants brought to the U.S. as children as well as immigrants eligible for Temporary Protected Status in 2017. Venezuelan­s and others allowed to stay in the country under Deferred Enforced Departure would also receive protection­s under this legislatio­n.

The American Dream and Promise Act passed in the House of Representa­tives last March but has failed to get traction in the Senate, which has a 50-50 partisan split.

Under the Dream Act of 2021, which protects childhood arrivals, an estimated 388,000 undocument­ed immigrants in Texas would be eligible for permanent residence — more than any other state, except California. Nearly half of these immigrants have been living in the U.S. for 15 years or more, according to the center’s calculatio­ns.

The authors of the report also cited multiple studies showing that legalizati­on programs – which haven’t been passed by Congress for decades – benefit

immigrant families and their citizen children by creating labor opportunit­ies, increasing access to education and removing the stressors around the fear of deportatio­n.

Failure to pass reform has also affected the immigratio­n legal system, which is increasing­ly more backlogged, with massive delays for certain visas and asylum cases.

The report found that under the Citizenshi­p for Essential Workers Act, 408,800 people in Greater Houston, or 71 percent of the undocument­ed population, would be eligible for legalizati­on. The bill would provide green cards for essential workers, along with their kids, spouses and parents.

Houston is among the top four cities in the country that would benefit from the passage of the Essential Workers legislatio­n, though the bill has yet to pass in either house.

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