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Trump targets DEI and civil service protections, striking fear in some federal workers; WA bill would expand automatic voter registration; Iowa farmers on board with corn-based jet fuel; New wildfire near Los Angeles explodes to 8,000 acres, forces evacuations; ND back on familiar ground in debating ballot-question threshold.

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Trump's pardons of January 6th participants spark mixed reactions, federal DEI suspensions raise equity concerns, diversity in medicine faces challenges post-affirmative action and Citizens United continues to amplify big money in politics.

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Winter blues? Alaskans cure theirs at the Cordova Iceworm Festival, Trump's energy plans will impact rural folks, legislation in Virginia aims to ensure rural communities get adequate EV charging stations, and a retreat for BIPOC women earns rave reviews.

House Bills Would Give Millions a Path to Citizenship

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Friday, May 24, 2019   

NEW YORK – The Dream Act and American Promise Act, extending permanent protection to millions of immigrants whose legal status is threatened, are on their way to the full U.S. House for a vote.

The bills, passed by the House Judiciary Committee yesterday, would extend permanent protection for young adults known as "Dreamers," who arrived here as children, and to those who were eligible for Temporary Protected Status or Deferred Enforced Departure as of January 2017. And they would create a path to citizenship for 2.2 million immigrants nationwide, including more than 80,000 in New York.

Anu Joshi, senior policy director at the New York Immigration Coalition, says the Trump administration's efforts to end protections for DACA and TPS recipients have thrown their lives into limbo.

"The Dream and Promise Act would be helping to ensure that they could live full, meaningful, healthy lives without living under the threat of deportation," says Joshi.

The Trump administration attempted to rescind Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals and terminate TPS and DED status for most of the people protected, but those efforts have been blocked by the courts.

After passing background checks and other requirements, the bills would allow both DACA and TPS recipients to apply for green cards and eventually, citizenship. Joshi points out that many TPS recipients already have lived in the U.S. for decades.

"There's about 300,000 current TPS recipients, and they have 275,000 U.S.-citizen children," says Joshi. “So, we're not just talking about immigrants. We're talking about U.S.-citizen kids who stand to benefit from this legislation."

There are more than 30,000 TPS recipients living in New York.

Joshi is confident the bills will pass in the House, but acknowledges it will be more difficult to get them through the Senate. However, she believes there is hope.

"There has been broad, bipartisan support in the past for the Dream Act, and legislation to protect TPS and DED recipients, and we just have to continue applying pressure," says Joshi.


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