Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Dreamers continue to be left behind

- By Alliyah Lusuegro Alliyah Lusuegro is the outreach coordinato­r for the National Priorities Project at the Institute for Policy Studies.

The Department of Homeland Security, or DHS, turned 20 this March. It was launched in 2003, right around the time I moved to the United States from the Philippine­s at age 6. I didn't yet know the impact this gargantuan department would have on my life.

I loved my life as a new American. I learned English quickly, read Time magazine for kids, and embraced my new red, white and blue terrain. In those early post-9/11 years, I even shared the belief that strict immigratio­n enforcemen­t was necessary to protect our country from outside “Others.”

It hadn't occurred to me then that, as a child whose family overstayed a tourist visa, I was one of those “Others” too. But gradually, that became all too clear.

As I grew up, I watched news of ICE raiding homes and separating families that looked a lot like mine. While my classmates traveled abroad for summer vacation, I stayed tucked away in my family's Chicago apartment. Afraid of coming face-to-face with police or immigratio­n authoritie­s, I started to fear all authority figures — even my school principals.

But after 10 years of this, a new window opened: the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, an

Obama administra­tion policy to help Dreamers like me stay in the country legally. I studied the qualificat­ions and meticulous­ly compared them to my life story. I checked all the boxes. I applied right away.

In the decade since, I've seen both the bad and good of U.S. immigratio­n policy.

On the one hand, I felt a sense of belonging among the 600,000 Dreamers who qualified for the program. I relished being able to drive a car and work a job as soon as I could.

As a high schooler I committed my life to learning, telling my story and advocating for immigrants. I even got to tell a packed audience at the 2013 National Immigrant Justice Center Human Rights Awards, including members of Congress and Supreme Court judges, that DACA changes lives for the better.

On the other hand, DACA wasn't as secure as we'd hoped.

When Donald Trump was elected during my first semester of college, all I could focus on was my fear that ICE would take me away — especially when Trump rescinded DACA in 2017. The Supreme Court eventually ruled that Trump didn't end the program correctly, but DACA still faces legal jeopardy.

Meanwhile, Dreamers must renew our DACA status, pay a hefty applicatio­n fee every two years, and keep a squeaky clean record. We can only travel abroad for education, work or the death of a loved one. Amid this insecurity, I've seen so much promise for a better system.

When Trump establishe­d the Muslim travel ban, thousands of protesters roared across cities and airports. Coalitions like the Defund Hate Campaign have blocked nearly $12 billion and counting of federal funding to ICE and CBP, calling to reinvest those funds in vital programs for communitie­s.

The vast majority of Americans continue to support a pathway to citizenshi­p for undocument­ed immigrants. Still, our country has funneled $1.4 trillion into DHS in these past two decades. Over that time, 5 million people have been deported. Countless others have been raided, assaulted and imprisoned just for trying to escape war, poverty or climate chaos.

Twenty years after the launch of DHS, what does security mean for the land of the free — and for a country of immigrants? Does it mean the gut-wrenching horrors of detention and deportatio­n, or a path to lawful residency or citizenshi­p?

This country deserves an immigratio­n policy that makes us all feel secure. I'm a Dreamer whose only dream is to not be bound by walls, cages or borders. I want to exist freely — not have my right to live equated to my immigratio­n status.

 ?? EUGENE GARCIA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A pair of migrant families from Brazil pass through a gap in the border wall to reach the United States after crossing from Mexico to Yuma, Ariz., to seek asylum in June 2021.
EUGENE GARCIA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A pair of migrant families from Brazil pass through a gap in the border wall to reach the United States after crossing from Mexico to Yuma, Ariz., to seek asylum in June 2021.

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