FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Immigrants
caught in the flawed U.S. immigration system and their attorneys
at the North Carolina Justice Center call on Congress to pass a comprehensive
immigration reform bill introduced today in both the House and the
Senate. The Realizing the American Dream Act would resolve the systemic
problems noted by President Bush on January 7, 2004 when he said, “The
[immigration] system is not working . . . Workers who seek only to
earn a living end up in the shadows of American life – fearful,
often abused and exploited . . . They are cut off from their families
far away, fearing if they leave our country to visit relatives back
home, they might never be able to return to their jobs.”
The bill tackles three key challenges:
| • |
Family
Reunification and Backlog Reduction: The Act helps immigrants
who have waited years to bring their family members to the United
States, and makes it easier for waiting families to stay in the
U.S. |
| |
|
| • |
Earned
Legalization: The Act provides a path to legalization for undocumented
immigrants who have lived and worked in the United States for
five or more years. |
| |
|
| • |
Future
Worker Program: The Realizing the American Dream
Act ensures
that temporary guestworkers have critical labor protections and
the eventual ability to stay in the United States if they choose,
and allows them to bring family members with them to the U.S. |
“
Our clients face overwhelming immigration bureaucracy,” says
Attracta Kelly, immigration attorney with the Justice Center’s
Immigrants Legal Assistance Project (ILAP). “Backlogs keep immigrants
separated from their families. In some cases, the wait is more than
fifteen years.” Rosalio Vigil Sanchez left El Salvador in 1987
to save his life. The Justice Center client has been trying to bring
his family to the U.S. to be with him ever since. He says, “My
children have grown up without me. My lawyer has told me that it will
be about another two years before my wife and children can come to
the United States.”
As President Bush said, “As a nation that values immigration,
and depends on immigration, we should have immigration laws that work
and make us proud.” The Realizing the American
Dream Act would
be of particular benefit to North Carolina. “The Act is critically
important to the future of our state,” explains Carol Brooke,
a farmworker attorney with ILAP. “We have one of the fastest
growing immigrant populations, and the largest number of agricultural
guestworkers in the nation.”
The North Carolina Justice Center is a statewide non-profit
organization working to eliminate poverty in North Carolina
by ensuring that
low-income, working poor, and minority individuals have
the resources they need
to move to economic security. The Center’s Immigrants Legal Assistance
Project represents low-income immigrants in immigration and employment
law matters.
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