Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

With Congress stuck, immigrant advocates go local

- By Suzanne Monyak Cq-roll Call (TNS)

WASHINGTON — With Congress at an impasse on major federal immigratio­n legislatio­n, some advocates have turned to local legislatur­es to promote and push through bills that would give undocument­ed immigrants access to driver’s licenses, in-state college tuition and other services.

“Because Washington doesn’t work, because Washington is not capable of solving problems at the national level, then states, they have been trying to improve the lives of people,” said Juan Manuel Guzman, state advocacy director at immigrant advocacy group United We Dream.

But those local advocates also recently have ramped up their defenses against what several described as a rise in anti-immigrant proposed bills in Texas and other states ahead of next year’s presidenti­al election.

The last time Congress passed legislatio­n providing a path to citizenshi­p for a large swath of the undocument­ed population was nearly 40 years ago. Current efforts to revise the nation’s immigratio­n system have stalled amid disagreeme­nt over how to handle high levels of migration to the southwest border.

Federal inaction has left an estimated 11 million undocument­ed immigrants living in the U.S., many of whom have no access to key services, including subsidized health care or retirement benefits, nor to a path to citizenshi­p.

This has left states to pick up the slack. Rebecca Shi, executive director of the American Business Immigratio­n Coalition, said advocates in states with undocument­ed residents are “trying to fill the gap” left open by Congress’ inaction.

“There has to be a solution, and if we can act on the local level, we will do that,” Shi said.

‘Dreamers’ waiting

It’s been more than a decade since the Obama administra­tion rolled out the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which gives work permits and deportatio­n protection­s to certain undocument­ed immigrants who came to the country as children, known as “Dreamers.”

The program, which does not lead to citizenshi­p for recipients, was initially intended as a temporary stopgap measure for hundreds of thousands of undocument­ed immigrants who were raised in the U.S. and now have no way to fix their statuses.

But since then, Congress has tried and failed multiple times to pass a legislativ­e solution for this population of immigrants, despite ongoing legal challenges that threaten to end the DACA program, which does not cover anyone who entered the country — or was born — after June 2007.

Only the federal government can grant work permits or deportatio­n protection­s, which has prompted advocates to push for state policies that support immigrants in other ways.

“The last policy that we saw that was a victory for the whole community was obviously DACA, which right now is on life support. And Congress has repeatedly failed to pass a pathway for citizenshi­p,” Guzman said. “The next battle is the states.”

The only immigratio­n-related bill Congress has brought to the floor this year centered on one such local effort in the District of Columbia. The House passed a resolution to overturn a D.C. bill that would allow immigrants to vote in local elections, similar to what other cities have done, but the Senate did not take up the measure.

‘Marked progress’

State and local measures to give undocument­ed immigrants more access to certain benefits have gained steam. In November, Arizona voters approved a propositio­n that would allow high school students to qualify for in-state tuition, regardless of immigratio­n status.

Massachuse­tts and Rhode Island have laws set to take effect this summer allowing undocument­ed immigrants to obtain driver’s licenses. In Massachuse­tts, the state House voted to override the governor’s veto to advance that legislatio­n.

The COVID-19 pandemic in particular fueled efforts to expand access to subsidized health care for undocument­ed immigrants.

In 2021, California became the first state to enact legislatio­n expanding health care access for low-income residents regardless of immigratio­n status. Advocates predict that campaigns will continue to ramp up to expand health care access for aging undocument­ed immigrants, who are not eligible for Social Security or other federal benefits.

According to a December report by the National Immigratio­n Law Center, which examined state legislativ­e action between 2012 and 2022, at least 23 states now offer in-state university tuition to undocument­ed students. Eighteen states either already or will soon offer driver’s licenses to undocument­ed immigrants — up from just three states in 2012.

“To the extent that states have the power, or localities have the power, to improve the daily lives of their residents and to make sure that they feel comfortabl­e engaging with government agencies and receiving what they need, then yes, we’ve seen marked progress at the state and local level,” said Tanya Broder, a senior staff attorney at NILC.

Democratic victories in November in states including Massachuse­tts, Vermont and Maryland could also open the door for measures to advance that help undocument­ed immigrants, the NILC report concludes.

On defense

As the Biden administra­tion has faced heat for high numbers of migrants crossing the southwest border, local immigrant advocates have also increasing­ly found themselves playing defense as they push back against proposals in states like Florida and Texas that would strip away rights for immigrants.

A bill pending in Texas, known as HB20, would create a state-run “Border Protection Unit” with the authority to oversee constructi­on of border barriers and to “arrest, detain and deter individual­s crossing the border illegally.”

Texas officials have blamed the high numbers of migrants crossing the U.s.-mexico border on the Biden administra­tion’s immigratio­n policies and argued that border states have unfairly borne the brunt of the problem.

The Texas Democratic Party has slammed the bill as a “Show Me Your Papers” state police force that would empower officers to arrest anyone they suspect to be undocument­ed migrants.

“This heinous bill, if passed, would do nothing to curb the crisis at our border — it would merely subject South Texans to constant state-mandated racial profiling and a level of big-brother police-state dystopia they could have never even imagined,” Texas Democratic Party Chairman Gilberto Hinojosa said in a March 10 news release.

Another bill proposed in the Texas State Senate this session would bar individual­s who are citizens of China, Iran, North Korea or Russia from buying property in the state. The bill does not carve out an exemption for U.S. permanent residents or other legal visa holders.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, has said he would sign the bill if it passed.

Mary Ibarra, political coordinato­r at the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, said there was a “really high chance” that a version of HB20 would make it into law.

Republican Gov. Ron Desantis of Florida, a likely 2024 presidenti­al contender, announced sprawling legislatio­n last month that would block undocument­ed immigrants from receiving state IDS, invalidate any out-of-state licenses they may have and bar undocument­ed students from accessing in-state tuition rates.

It would also require hospitals to collect informatio­n about patients’ immigratio­n statuses and submit reports about the cost of care for undocument­ed immigrants, and heighten criminal penalties for transporti­ng or housing undocument­ed immigrants.

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