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DIVERSITY EMPLOYERS MAGAZINE
Spring 2011 - Anniversary Commemorative Issue

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Ice on Immigration:
What now for the DREAM Act?

Question: I was disappointed when the DREAM act was defeated in the US Senate recently.  What are the chances that it will pass in 2011? 

Answer:  The Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act, also known as the DREAM Act, would have provided qualified undocumented youth the opportunity to earn lawful permanent resident status if they successfully completed certain educational or military requirements and stayed out of legal trouble.  The DREAM Act would have helped young people who were brought to this country by their parents at an age when they had no say in the decision.  Since the DREAM Act failed in Congress in 2010, it will have to be re-introduced in the new Congress beginning in 2011 and go through the legislative process.  President Obama has vowed to try to revive the Act and to help get it passed in the House of Representatives and the Senate, so that he can sign it into law.  

The chances of the DREAM Act passing and becoming law in 2011 are uncertain, especially since the Democratic party lost several members of Congress in the November 2010 elections.  While not all Democrats supported the DREAM Act, most who voted in favor of the measure were Democrats.  Of interest to readers in Mississippi, where I am based, is the fact that both U.S. Senators from the state, who are Republicans, voted against the DREAM Act and so did all of the state’s Representatives except for Bennie Thompson, a Democrat. 

If you would like to see the DREAM Act become law in 2011, it is important that you contact your Congress persons by letter, telephone or e-mail and ask them to support it.

 

L. Patricia Ice

Featured IMDiversity Immigration Columnist L. Patricia Ice is an attorney and counselor who has taught immigration law at Mississippi College School of Law in Jackson, and also contributes regular immigration advice stories to La Noticia and The Jackson Advocate.  A practicing attorney, Ms. Ice is a former Equal Justice Works Katrina Legal Fellow, focusing on immigrant family and employment issues in areas around the Gulf Coast.  Ms. Ice trains law students in the extern program of the Mississippi College School of law. She is also dedicated to immigrants rights advocacy, and serves as the Director of the Legal Project  of the non-profit rights education group, MIRA: The Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance at www.yourmira.org.

Articles in this column are Copyright 2006-2009 L. Patricia Ice.  All rights reserved.  Please do not reproduce further without seeking the permission of the author.

IMDiversity.com is committed to presenting diverse points of view. However, the viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or employees at IMD.