The Denver Post

A pilgrimage for reform

Advocates urge representa­tives to support update to immigratio­n registry

- By Saja Hindi shindi@denverpost.com

For three days, all they did was walk. The immigrant rights activists walked, despite blisters forming on their feet and their shoes wearing thin, despite the physical and emotional toll it was taking on their bodies and despite the cold air that blew against their faces. They walked for 60 miles because, if nothing else, it forced the people around them to pay attention.

Colorado immigrants and their allies joined for all or part of the journey from Denver to Greeley this month in a pilgrimage calling for the state’s congressio­nal leaders to support legislatio­n that would expand a pathway to citizenshi­p for immigrants lacking legal status. A federal bill would update what’s known as the immigratio­n registry, which has been used in the past to grant amnesty to waves of immigrants who entered the country without authorizat­ion.

More than a dozen advocates joined the long walk at stops along the way, while a handful — all immigrants themselves — made the entire journey. The participan­ts stopped in Denver, Northglenn, Brighton, Fort Lupton, Plattevill­e and Greeley, sleeping in churches at night. They met with staff members representi­ng Colorado’s congressio­nal leaders as well as with community members.

“Our community is determined to get (a path to citizenshi­p), no matter how long or how hard the road is,” said Raquel LaneArella­no, a spokespers­on for the Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition.

The immigratio­n registry, created by Congress in 1929, has allowed people who entered the United States without documentat­ion before a certain date to apply for permanent residency if they are not subject to deportatio­n for other reasons. Since the registry’s establishm­ent, the cutoff date has been updated four times — most recently extended to apply to arrivals by Jan. 1, 1972, in a change approved in 1986, when

President Ronald Reagan was in office.

At the time, Reagan, a Republican, also granted amnesty for immigrant children without documentat­ion through an executive order.

Supporters of another update say it’s one of the easiest ways to offer a quick legal path to permanent residency for more than 8 million immigrants who have lived in the country for years, setting down roots. They now rely on a patchwork of immigratio­n laws that apply only to some immigrants — and they can only look for hope to a divided Congress that for years has failed to pass fixes for the broken immigratio­n system.

As broader immigratio­n reform bills proposing registry updates have stalled in recent years, at least part of the opposition has stemmed from a resistance by more conservati­ve elected leaders to grant legal status to large groups of people who entered the country without authorizat­ion. Opponents of the idea tend to favor stronger enforcemen­t of existing immigratio­n laws, including stepped-up border security and, in some cases, more deportatio­ns.

Lane-arrellano, whose family immigrated from Mexico, said she has relatives who benefited from the last registry update decades ago. Others are “forced to live in unnecessar­y substandar­d status because Congress refuses to take action,” she said, even though they’ve lived in and contribute­d to the U. S. for decades.

For Leticia Ramirez, a 46-year-old mother of three who has lived in Colorado for 21 years since coming from Mexico, a big part of the pilgrimage was also about informing the community. She said the participan­ts had great discussion­s at some of the churches where they stayed.

“It gave us the opportunit­y to talk to more people who want to join this movement,” she said through a Spanish translator.

Is update to registry overdue?

Advocates say it’s long past time to update the cutoff date for the registry. As drafted, the bill introduced by U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla, a California Democrat, would allow an immigrant to apply for permanent resident status seven years after entering the country.

That would change the fixed cutoff date to a rolling date that, if the legislatio­n wins approval in the coming year, initially would move up to 2017.

Although Democratic lawmakers often support immigratio­n reforms that include paths to citizenshi­p, not all Colorado Democrats in Congress have voiced support.

That’s partly why the activists chose to walk at the start of December through the state’s 8th Congressio­nal District, represente­d by first-term U. S. Rep. Yadira Caraveo.

Caraveo’s parents benefited from the last registry update because they had entered the country in the 1970s. But the congresswo­man told The Denver Post that she didn’t see it as likely that a registry update bill would be introduced under the current House speaker or have a chance of passing the Republican- controlled House.

Plus, it’s not part of a comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform package — and doesn’t have a funding mechanism set out, Caraveo said.

Democratic Reps. Brittany Pettersen, Joe Neguse, Jason Crow and Diana DeGette have signed onto a similar House bill, but Caraveo has not. Sens. Michael Bennet and John Hickenloop­er, also Democrats, have not signed on to the Senate version.

Hickenloop­er ’ s staf f has spoken to advocates and is looking into the bill, spokespers­on Kaitlin Hooker said. Bennet’s office did not return a request for comment.

Caraveo said a more farreachin­g effort is needed to reach a consensus between the political parties on border security, the asylum system and a legal pathway to citizenshi­p for people who have lived, worked and paid taxes in the U. S. for decades.

Her district, she added, is evenly split politicall­y, so she believes her constituen­ts would appreciate bipartisan solutions.

Greeley, where the pilgrimage ended, is just outside the large 4th Congressio­nal District, represente­d by Republican U. S. Rep. Ken Buck. In a written statement, Buck spokespers­on Joe Jackson said the congressma­n “does not support legislatio­n incentiviz­ing illegal immigratio­n or mass amnesty.”

The Colorado immigrant advocates say they, too, would like to see more sweeping reform. They have heavily opposed the only movement recently — hardline Republican­s’ push, so far unsuccessf­ul, for President Joe Biden and the Democrats to agree to tougher border security and asylum policies in exchange for war aid for Ukraine and Israel.

“I feel that responsibi­lity” to push for change

Homero Ocon, a 53-yearold Mexican immigrant, was among the handful of people who walked the entire 60 miles of the pilgrimage. Ocon has been in Colorado since he immigrated to the United States 24 years ago in search of a better life. He moved to Denver because that’s where his sister lived.

In 2022 he also took part in a 40- day bike ride from Denver to Washington, D.C., to raise awareness of immigratio­n reform.

“I feel that responsibi­lity,” Ocon said of his decision to take part in the three- day walk. “We are already small but a really close group, (a) close team — we are committed to do what we need to do to pass immigratio­n reform.”

Ocon said he applied for permanent residency through his wife. But that happened recently, after years spent living in fear while undocument­ed, unable to travel back to his home country to see his family or even attend his grandmothe­r’s funeral.

He picked up whatever work he could to make ends meet, he said. He watched immigrants working essential jobs die during the pandemic because they didn’t have health care. Others worked into their 70s or until employers no longer wanted them, because they had no retirement savings.

For Ramirez, the pilgrimage was exhausting, but she kept “the why” in her mind to help propel her forward.

She said she’s been disappoint­ed by Caraveo, the state’s first Latina congresswo­man, who won election in 2022. Caraveo hasn’t supported a registry update but has supported legislatio­n that would allow the deportatio­n of undocument­ed immigrants who assault first responders, Ramirez said.

Ramirez is urging more people to get informed and call for reform.

Ocon says he’s become frutsrated and a little jaded by the lack of progress. He doesn’t know if political leaders will support a path toward citizenshi­p, but he still believes in pushing for change.

“We still have faith that people get together and get more ideas and ways to put pressure (on politician­s) for something to happen,” he said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY HYOUNG CHANG — THE DENVER POST ?? Leticia Ramirez and immigrant rights advocates begin a “Pilgrimage for Citizenshi­p” at the Colorado Capitol in Denver on Dec. 1. The aim of the Denver-to-greeley march was to pressure Colorado’s congressio­nal delegation to support a bill that would update the Registry Act to provide more immigrants a path to permanent legal status.
PHOTOS BY HYOUNG CHANG — THE DENVER POST Leticia Ramirez and immigrant rights advocates begin a “Pilgrimage for Citizenshi­p” at the Colorado Capitol in Denver on Dec. 1. The aim of the Denver-to-greeley march was to pressure Colorado’s congressio­nal delegation to support a bill that would update the Registry Act to provide more immigrants a path to permanent legal status.
 ?? ?? Marlin Solis, 10, left, holds her brother Alfonso Enriquez, 3, during the early December rally at the Capitol.
Marlin Solis, 10, left, holds her brother Alfonso Enriquez, 3, during the early December rally at the Capitol.
 ?? HYOUNG CHANG — THE DENVER POST ?? Immigrant rights advocates begin their long march to Greeley from Denver.
HYOUNG CHANG — THE DENVER POST Immigrant rights advocates begin their long march to Greeley from Denver.

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