advertisement
While America has the Deferred Action on Childhood Arrivals (DACA) legislation for undocumented young immigrants who entered the US as children (also referred to as 'dreamers') providing them a temporary reprieve from deportation and a work permit, there is no such legislation for documented or legal dreamers.
A majority of them are of Indian origin. They attend American schools and graduate from American universities but because they maintain their legal status, they are not qualified for protection under DACA or for the work authorisation that comes with it.
A reason for not having separate legislation could be the anticipation that they are already being covered by their parents’ green card application for permanent residence. But in the last ten years, green card applications have been stuck in a backlog due to the outdated country cap rule. The process that took two to four years has now increased to ten to twenty years or more.
While a spate of legislation is underway to change the country cap rule, the children who turn 21 before their parents qualify for a green card are losing both their dependent status as well as their eligibility for derivative permanent residence through their parents’ application.
To stay on and work after they graduate, they have to enter the H-1B lottery. If they get lucky and win the lottery, their employer must sponsor them for a green card. Then they enter the green card queue behind everyone else – despite already waiting many years as dependents on their parents' application.
They enjoy football games and 4th of July fireworks like other Americans yet the ‘documented dreamers’ face barriers unique to them, at every step.
Nineteen-year-old Anagh, a sophomore at Ohio State University, is on H-4 visa. He said he has always been ineligible to receive federal aid and most academic scholarships despite his strong academic performance and stellar test scores.
To plug in this legal loophole, on 1 July 2021, the bipartisan legislation, America's CHILDREN (Cultivation of Hope and Inclusion for Long-term Dependents Raised and Educated Natively) Act was introduced in the Congress.
Dip Patel, founder of Improve The Dream, an organisation run by young immigrants, that has been working since 2017 to raise awareness on the plight of documented dreamers said, "I found a basic lack of understanding of the problem and that is what has led me to start long-term relationship building with elected officials through ‘Improve the Dream’."
When asked how the CHILDREN Act will help, he said, "First, it will permanently end the ageing out. Second, it will give work authorisation. Third, it also allows the documented dreamers to keep the priority dates that they had under their parents' application when they apply for green card."
He is delighted about the introduction of the CHILDREN Act, but he has been simultaneously working on other initiatives to help. “While the House version of the Dream and Promise Act (HR.6) includes many documented dreamers, the Senate version of the Dream Act excludes them by requiring applicants to be undocumented,” he said.
Neil Makhija, executive director at IMPACT, America’s leading South Asian advocacy organisation, applauds the CHILDREN Act for giving hope to documented dreamers "who are American in every sense of the word but for an immigration policy that is unfair, unjust, and unwise."
Overhauling the broken immigration system in the US will take time. Till then, focused legislations like America's CHILDREN Act will calm the frayed nerves of young documented dreamers and help them fulfill their American dream.
(The author is a public policy professional based in Arlington, Massachusetts.)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)