USA TODAY US Edition

Plight of some ‘Dreamers’ is heavy with irony

For thousands working in health care, they’re needed now more than ever.

- Richard Wolf

Veronica Velasquez’s job as a physical therapist at a Los Angeles community hospital has become riskier as the number of coronaviru­s patients rises. But the risk of losing her working papers and being deported hasn’t changed at all.

Velasquez, 27, is among the nearly 700,000 young people who were brought to the USA as children and rely on the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, that President Donald Trump wants to terminate. A Supreme Court ruling could come any day.

Her plight, along with those of about 27,000 DACA recipients working as doctors, nurses, paramedics and other health care workers, is full of irony. When the nation needs her most, she could be pulled from the workforce.

“I am treating people suspected of having COVID-19, and all I’m asking is to stay in this country and provide that care,” Velasquez says. “We’re definitely helping them stay alive.”

As the Supreme Court considers their fate, USA TODAY spoke with DACA recipients working in the health care field in California, Florida, Texas and in the suburbs of New York City, where the coronaviru­s has hit hardest. Some face a shortage of personal protective equipment, often wearing the same masks for an entire hospital shift. Others are well-supplied but nervous nonetheles­s.

Jesus Contreras helped fight Hurricane Harvey in Houston three years ago, a monstrous storm that dumped 40 inches of rain and led to 17,000 rescues. The virus, he says, is a far bigger threat.

“We haven’t seen its full potential yet,” says Contreras, 26, a paramedic who answers 911 calls. “My biggest concern is we’ll have to start turning patients away, deciding which patients get treatment.”

That’s not his only concern. Contreras must worry about contractin­g the virus himself, as well as staying in the country he came to from Mexico in

1999.

“I’m not so much worried but precautiou­s, hyper-aware of the amount of risk that my line of work brings,” he says. “We’re not only going to have to worry about this pandemic, but we’re going to have to worry about our immigratio­n status and deportatio­n.”

‘Would be catastroph­ic’

President Barack Obama sought to alleviate those worries in 2012 by creating the program after failing to get a more ambitious plan through Congress. Four years later, federal courts shot down his effort to extend similar protection­s to more than 4 million undocument­ed adults.

The Trump administra­tion was prodded into curtailing the program when Texas threatened a lawsuit. Federal courts from California to New York stepped in, leaving the program in place and setting up the Supreme Court showdown.

During oral argument in November, the court’s conservati­ve majority appeared likely to side with the administra­tion. If the justices simply refuse to overrule the Department of Homeland Security’s decision, a new president just as easily could renew the program. If they declare the entire program unlawful, Congress would have to step in.

In legal papers submitted last October, the Associatio­n of American Medical Colleges cited federal warnings about “the risk of a pandemic” as a reason to keep DACA recipients contributi­ng to a “robust health workforce.”

“Infectious diseases can spread around the globe in a matter of days due to increased urbanizati­on and internatio­nal travel,” the group warned. “These conditions pose a threat to America’s health security – its preparedne­ss for and ability to withstand incidents with public-health consequenc­es.”

Friday, a legal services organizati­on at Yale Law School sent a letter to the high court urging that the administra­tion’s

decision to terminate DACA should be blocked in light of the pandemic.

“Health care providers on the front lines of our nation’s fight against COVID-19 rely significan­tly upon DACA recipients to perform essential work,” it said.

“Terminatio­n of DACA during this national emergency would be catastroph­ic,” the letter said.

That effort took on political overtones Sunday when Democratic presidenti­al front-runner Joe Biden warned that such a decision “will leave a gaping hole in our health care system that is liable to cost American lives.”

‘Just my calling’

The lives of DACA recipients, also known as DREAMers, could be among them.

In Northern California, Ana Cueva, 27, has been working 12-hour shifts as a nurse in the intensive care unit of a community hospital. She decided on her career at the age of 9, having arrived in Utah from Mexico.

“The hospitals are way underprepa­red for a pandemic on this scale. They ration the equipment out, specifical­ly the masks,” Cueva says. “I did not really agree to being exposed to certain diseases – viruses, pandemics, whatever – because the government wasn’t prepared.”

In Fort Myers, Florida, paramedic Aldo Martinez, 26, worked a 48-hour shift late last week, helping a COVID-19 patient the second day.

A native of Mexico who arrived in the USA when he was 12, Martinez has seen what happens when fellow health care workers need to self-quarantine, leading to staff shortages.

“It’s been hectic. It’s been crazy. We’re learning as we go,” he says. If DACA recipients were to lose their ability to work, he says, it would “create more chaos in an already chaotic situation.”

In northern New Jersey, about an hour outside New York City, a registered nurse who came from South Korea at age 11 lives in fear that he might infect his wife and parents. His hospital, like many, faces a shortage of protective equipment.

“This is very difficult,” says Daniel, 32, who did not want to use his last name because of his immigratio­n status. “Everybody’s getting more anxious about it.”

For Velasquez, a native of the Philippine­s who came to the USA when she was 11, the coronaviru­s has been a rude awakening after five months as a physical therapist. Her hospital set up three tents to prepare for the expected influx of patients.

“A lot of them do get weak, and they can’t even get out of bed due to their poor respirator­y status, which causes weaknesses in their muscles,” she says. “That’s where physical therapy comes in.”

“This is just my calling. I worked very hard to become a physical therapist, especially with DACA,” she says. “I knew this was something I wanted to do, pandemic or no pandemic.”

 ?? COURTESY OF JESUS CONTRERAS ?? Jesus Contreras, a DACA recipient and paramedic, said of COVID-19, “We haven’t seen its full potential yet.”
COURTESY OF JESUS CONTRERAS Jesus Contreras, a DACA recipient and paramedic, said of COVID-19, “We haven’t seen its full potential yet.”
 ?? MICHAEL HOLAHAN/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Registered nurses and patient care technician­s wait for their next patient to drive up to be tested for the coronaviru­s at Christenbe­rry Fieldhouse in Augusta, Ga.
MICHAEL HOLAHAN/USA TODAY NETWORK Registered nurses and patient care technician­s wait for their next patient to drive up to be tested for the coronaviru­s at Christenbe­rry Fieldhouse in Augusta, Ga.
 ?? VERONICA VELASQUEZ ?? Veronica Velasquez, a DACA recipient and physical therapist, came to the U.S. from the Philippine­s at age 11.
VERONICA VELASQUEZ Veronica Velasquez, a DACA recipient and physical therapist, came to the U.S. from the Philippine­s at age 11.

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