Los Angeles Times

UC steps up for immigrants

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Re “UC aims to hire students regardless of legal status,” May 19

I am one of the authors of the legal memo that undergirds the Opportunit­y For All campaign, which seeks to remove hiring restrictio­ns for all University of California students, regardless of immigratio­n status.

Our theory rests on principles that should be particular­ly attractive to conservati­ve legal scholars (and judges): close fidelity to the text of the Immigratio­n Reform and Control Act, and respect for state autonomy.

I am proud of the university for having the courage to embrace an idea whose time has truly come. I hope legal actors across the political spectrum will now do the same.

Ahilan Arulananth­am

South Pasadena The writer is co-director of UCLA’s Center for Immigratio­n Law and Policy.

The UC regents’ decision to support employment opportunit­ies for undocument­ed students is long overdue.

For more than two decades, Congress has failed to pass the Dream Act, a sensible piece of legislatio­n that would provide undocument­ed youth with a path to citizenshi­p. The inability of Congress to enact any meaningful immigratio­n reform is doing irreparabl­e harm to immigrant students and their families, as well as to society as a whole.

I have taught at UCLA for more than 30 years. Some of my finest students have been undocument­ed immigrants who have succeeded against all obstacles. And yet, even with a degree from UCLA, they have been legally barred from working.

UC is standing on the right side of history by providing job opportunit­ies for immigrant students so they can fully contribute to our universiti­es and our society. Kent Wong Los Angeles The writer is director of the UCLA Labor Center.

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