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DACA Recipients Face Months-Long Delays for Work Permit Renewals

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DACA Recipients Face Months-Long Delays for Work Permit Renewals
DACA RecipientsWork Permit RenewalsImmigration Delays

The article discusses the issues faced by DACA recipients due to the delay in work permit renewals, which are causing them to lose paychecks and fear deportation. It also mentions the efforts of the Trump administration to increase screening and vetting of all immigrants, and the impact of this policy on the lives of DACA recipients.

DACA recipients are facing months-long delays for work permit renewals , leaving them vulnerable to arrest and deportation. The immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children are losing paychecks and bracing for possible deportation.

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services did not explain what's causing the delays, but a spokesman said the agency has increased screening and vetting of all immigrants. An immigration attorney near San Diego was fired and a nurse in the East Bay area was placed on unpaid leave after their work permits expired. Both depend on work permits and legal protection afforded under Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, a program created by President Obama in 2012.

Recent processing delays at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services are leaving many DACA recipients vulnerable to arrest and deportation as their two-year work permits expire. The agency did not explain what's causing the processing delays. Spokesperson Zach Kahler wrote in a statement that 'under the leadership of President Trump, USCIS is safeguarding the American people by more thoroughly screening and vetting all aliens.

' During his first term in office, Trump tried unsuccessfully to rescind DACA. A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said ICE arrested 650 DACA recipients between Jan. 20, 2025, and April 30, nearly 90% of whom had been charged with or convicted of a crime. The spokesperson did not say how many have been deported. California has more than a quarter of the nation's approximately 500,000 DACA recipients, according to Citizenship and Immigration Services figures.

On average, they are 31 years old. To qualify for DACA, applicants had to pass background checks and meet certain educational or work requirements. During a news conference ahead of the DACA forum last month, Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.

) reflected on the day in June 2012 when DACA applications first opened. He said parents of young immigrants asked him if it was safe for their children to sign up for the program, which required admitting their lack of legal status and home address.

'Are you sure that the government won't use that information against us at some time? ' he remembered them saying. 'I said, 'Follow the law exactly as it is written and announced in the executive order, and we'll stand by you. Just believe in us to do that.

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latimes /  🏆 11. in US

DACA Recipients Work Permit Renewals Immigration Delays Deferred Action For Childhood Arrivals U.S. Citizenship And Immigration Services President Trump Screening And Vetting Immigration Policy

 

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