Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

After suing, ‘Dreamers’ receive permits to travel outside the U.S.

- By Andrea Castillo

After a Long Beach educationa­l organizati­on sued the Biden administra­tion last month, several dozen immigrants have received travel permits to study abroad.

The approvals came just in time for the students’ trip to Mexico, which is part of a Cal State Long Beach program and was scheduled to begin Saturday.

All the applicants have been spared from deportatio­n under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which temporaril­y shields so-called Dreamers who came to the United States as children and have lived here without legal immigratio­n status. A provision under DACA allows for legal travel for work, school or humanitari­an reasons.

The complaint filed against the Biden administra­tion in April had sought a response from immigratio­n authoritie­s to the applicatio­ns that 84 Dreamers submitted nine months ago. They’d had to push their trip back by five months because of the delayed reply.

Attorney Jorge Gonzalez said some of the applicants had received notices saying their paperwork would not be expedited. After the lawsuit was filed, he noticed a change — applicants started receiving notificati­on that their travel documents were being generated.

“This is a timeliness issue,” he said. “If it’s not granted in time, then it’s worthless.”

A spokeswoma­n for U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n

Services said the agency has been working diligently to resolve the issue but would not comment further on pending litigation.

This month, 22 members of Congress signed a letter written by Rep. Alan Lowenthal (D-Long Beach) urging immigratio­n officials to speed up processing times.

“Applicatio­ns for travel authorizat­ion are currently ranging from three months to more than two years, preventing DACA recipients from traveling to attend to family emergencie­s or for legitimate educationa­l reasons,” Lowenthal wrote.

Shoba Sivaprasad Wadhia, a law professor and director of the Center for Immigrants’ Rights Clinic at Penn State Law, said the outcome sends a signal that USCIS can process the applicatio­ns more quickly. “I am cautiously optimistic that USCIS will continue to process advance parole applicatio­ns for DACA recipients consistent with the court order and the administra­tion’s own commitment to preserve DACA,” she said, using the formal term for the process by which Dreamers and certain other immigrants can apply to travel.

Winning the approvals also removes some of the hurdles that have kept those DACA recipients from gaining citizenshi­p, a pathway that had been blocked when President Trump moved to end DACA entirely in 2017. It has remained closed off for many Dreamers, despite a 2020 Supreme Court ruling that the Obama-era program, which protected some 700,000 Dreamers, must be restored.

The California-Mexico Studies Center, a named plaintiff in the lawsuit, had led more than 160 DACA recipients on study-abroad trips before 2018.

Beyond allowing Dreamers to reconnect with family, there’s a deeper reason that receiving advance parole is significan­t. Immigrants who leave the U.S. after having entered without authorizat­ion are penalized.

Returning to the U.S. through an establishe­d port of entry erases those penalties, clearing the way for a DACA recipient who has someone to sponsor them for legal residency.

For some, the news came too late. After the recent death of her grandmothe­r, one applicant said she no longer had a reason to travel. Four dropped out, and 79 of the 80 remaining applicants were approved to travel.

Gonzalez said the lawsuit has generated interest among immigratio­n lawyers. The question now, he said, is whether federal immigratio­n authoritie­s will begin to more quickly process travel applicatio­ns for all DACA recipients.

If the plaintiffs can’t reach an agreement with the federal government, they could seek a class-action lawsuit. Gonzalez said the goal is to establish a timeliness standard for all future applicants. He also sees the lawsuit as a catalyst for working toward something bigger — getting rid of the years-long penalties associated with unlawful entry.

“Biden is talking about immigratio­n reform in little steps,” he said. “We’re playing the long game.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States