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  • Dallas-area students cling to American dream

    Dallas Morning News, TX

    Dallas-area students cling to American dream

    09:53 PM CDT on Sunday, July 6, 2008

    By STELLA M. CHÃ?VEZ [email protected]

    Cristina Gamez quotes Albert Einstein, plays the piano and knows basic
    Japanese. Monica Ibarra Rodriguez enjoys Guitar Hero and plans to one
    day work as a substance abuse counselor. Her cousin, Jose de Jesus
    Ibarra, wants to be a mechanical engineer.

    The Dallas-area young adults are typical of many college-age students
    ` full of hopes and plans for the future. But all three are living in
    the country illegally and last year became subjects of deportation
    proceedings.

    The students recently learned that U.S. Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson,
    D-Dallas, has taken up their cause. On June 20, Ms. Johnson filed a
    private bill that seeks to keep them from being deported.

    In the absence of comprehensive immigration legislation, private
    immigration bills are sometimes a measure of last resort for
    immigrants trying to remain in the country. Such legislation names
    specific individuals and is intended only for them.

    In this case, all three were brought to the U.S. from Mexico many
    years ago by their parents.

    "That time was running out, and I didn't feel like I could keep
    waiting," said Ms. Johnson. "It [the bill] might not pass, but at
    least it buys us some time."

    Ira Mehlman, media director of the Federation for American Immigration
    Reform, said exceptions should not be made for children, even if they
    had no choice in coming here.

    "It's simply a bad precedent to set," Mr. Mehlman said. "While we
    certainly don't take any pleasure in seeing the kids harmed, we as a
    society hold the parents responsible. Children are not human
    shields. Unfortunately, this was a situation created by the parents,
    and there are consequences to breaking the law and those consequences
    affect your family."

    Ms. Johnson's measure comes 10 days after U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein,
    D-Calif., filed a private bill to keep an Armenian high school student
    from being deported.

    The bills have several hurdles to clear. They must go through
    committee hearings and pass both the House and Senate before being
    signed into law by the president. Few have been enacted.

    Ms. Johnson said she's realistic about her bill's odds.

    "I think it's a long shot, but I think once we have a hearing and
    people hear the real story, there's a possibility we might have the
    votes," she said.

    Immigrant proponents have sought a remedy for children of illegal
    immigrants in the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors
    Act, or DREAM Act, which would grant legal status to illegal
    immigrants who graduated from a U.S. high school and attended college
    or served in the military. But last fall, the bill failed in the
    Senate.

    The bill's fate was especially disappointing for the Ibarras, who
    traveled to Washington for the vote and met with Sen. Kay Bailey
    Hutchison's staff. She supported the bill.

    Sen. John Cornyn opposed it and refused to meet with the family
    because they were in the country illegally, he said at the time.

    Ms. Gamez was 5 when she came to the United States, but she could tell
    the stark contrast between her native country and America.

    "For one thing, everybody has shoes," she recalled noticing. "Everyone
    is nicely dressed."

    Her parents initially intended to return home, but decided they'd lead
    a better life here, she said.

    Problems arose last year when she racked up numerous school
    absences. That landed her in truancy court. There, an officer asked
    her if she was a U.S. citizen, which led to court hearings and into
    the offices of immigration attorney Liz Cedillo-Pereira.

    The Ibarras, both 19, were caught at a party on senior skip
    day. During her stay in a detention facility, all Ms. Ibarra Rodriguez
    could think about was graduation.

    "I just wanted to make my family proud ... that I didn't waste my time
    going to school for nothing," she said, crying.

    Ms. Ibarra Rodriguez, who is enrolled in a local community college,
    said Ms. Johnson's bill gives her hope, but she remains worried.

    She said Mexico is a foreign place to her.

    Ms. Cedillo-Pereira, who is representing all three students, said they
    are good students who want to finish college and become legal working
    residents.

    "Once we're able to seek a more comprehensive solution, we won't have
    to seek more remedies of last resort," she said.

    Larry James, president and CEO of Central Dallas Ministries, said he
    supports the students.

    "We're really grateful beyond words, but at the same time we recognize
    that this is not the way to handle immigration," Mr. James
    said. "We're going to fight to see that they get to stay."
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