Armed
with foreign birth certificates, school records and proof they have grown up in
the U.S., tens of thousands of young illegal immigrants across the country
applied Wednesday to a program that could allow them to remain in the country
and work legally.
In
Chicago, more than 10,000 people thronged Navy Pier to take part in an
application workshop held by the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee
Rights. In Los Angeles, lines began forming at 5 a.m. outside the offices of
another organization where more than 100 volunteers, including attorneys, were
on hand to help applicants fill out forms.
People
lined up in Los Angeles Wednesday for help with applications to a program that
would allow them to stay in the U.S. and work legally.
"I'm
ready for my life to change," said Luis Garcia, 27 years old, of Mexico,
who had been standing more than two hours in a line that wrapped around the
block of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles.
Crescencio
Calderon, the 21-year-old son of a gardener arrived at sunrise. "So many
opportunities are going to open up now," said the Mexican college student,
who boasts a 3.95 grade point average and hopes to study law.
Nearly
two million immigrants could benefit from the Deferred Action for Childhood
Arrivals program, which began accepting applications Wednesday. The program,
announced by President Barack Obama in June, is the biggest development in
immigration policy since 1986, when President Ronald Reagan convinced Congress
to pass an amnesty that benefited three million undocumented immigrants.
Beneficiaries of DACA will get a Social Security number. However, they won't
get a green card—permanent legal residency that would put them on the path to
U.S. citizenship. DACA participants have to reapply every two years.
Some
critics of illegal immigration say the program is tantamount to amnesty and
will mean more competition for scarce jobs. Others say the president is
pandering to Latino voters in an election year.
To
qualify, immigrants must show they arrived in the U.S. before they turned 16,
are 30 or younger and have lived continuously in the country for at least five
years. They also must be enrolled in school in the U.S., have graduated from
high school here or served in the U.S. military. The application fee is $465.
Immigrants
have been scrambling to secure thedocuments they require. The consulates of
Mexico and some Central American countries saw demand surge for passports and
other identification. Los Angeles Unified School District's student-records office
was barraged with requests for transcripts.
On
Wednesday, vendors selling fruit and hot dogs did brisk business outside
CHIRLA's offices where applicants waited. Inside, the organization offered
complete service, from computers to photo booths and fingerprinting. Volunteer
Alma Maldonado said the organization had scheduled 600 appointments for
application assistance but hundreds more people had shown up.
In
Chicago, thousands packed a ballroom lined with computers, where applicants
could download forms from the website of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services, the federal agency overseeing the effort.
It is
likely to take several months to process each application, which will be
reviewed by adjudicators at four agency centers that have added staff to handle
the program.
"People
want to come forward," said Lawrence Benito, head of the Illinois
immigrant coalition, which organized the Chicago workshop.
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