June 15, 2012 Ridgewood , NJ - We
applaud today's announcement by the Obama Administration that it will grant
deferred action to undocumented youth who were brought to the United States
as small children and who have been raised and educated in communities around
the country. Today's announcement builds on the prosecutorial discretion
initiatives already undertaken by the White House and Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) and was done to ensure that eligible young people do not fall
through the cracks, that resources are used wisely, and that humanitarian
factors are considered when enforcing our immigration laws.
Deferred
action is not permanent legal status or citizenship but rather a way to allow
those young people, who have been in this country since they were young, to
complete their education, continue their military service or begin their
careers. The grant of deferred action will be issued on a case-by-case basis
and is renewable every two years.
Deferred
action has long been available on an individual basis, but in certain
compelling circumstances, past administrations have found it more efficient,
predictable, and practical to designate a broader group of individuals who share
common characteristics as presumptively eligible for deferred action.
Today's
announcement will create the necessary space to allow Congress to craft a more
permanent solution that will extend legal status to these young people who are
American in all but their country of birth.
According to
DHS, deferred action will be offered to young people between the ages of 15-30
who came to the U.S.
before the age of 16 and have been in the country for at least five years, have
no criminal history, and are in the country as of today.
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NACHMAN, PHULWANI, ZIMOVCAK LAW GROUP, P.C.
David H. Nachman
email: david_nachman@visaserve.com
phone: 201-670-0006
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