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Bullard student Case highlights the flaws in US immigration policy

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  • Bullard student Case highlights the flaws in US immigration policy

    Fresno Bee (California)
    June 11, 2008 Wednesday
    CHASE EDITION



    Case of Bullard student highlights the flaws in U.S. immigration policy


    High school students such as Arthur Mkoyan are assets to this
    country. He came to Fresno as a 2-year-old from Armenia and graduated
    Tuesday from Bullard High School as valedictorian. He has been
    accepted to the University of California, Davis, where he would like
    to major in chemistry.

    But there's a catch. He's about to be deported to Armenia, a country
    he doesn't know and whose language he hardly speaks.

    Mkoyan is among about 25,000 students a year who graduate from
    California high schools (65,000 nationally) in a similar situation:
    They were brought here by their parents and have grown up here, but
    they are prevented from a path to citizenship.

    Mkoyan's parents fled the old Soviet Union, but their appeals for
    asylum ran out this year. Arthur's father is being held at a detention
    center in Arizona; his mother was released to care for the
    children. Arthur's U.S.-born brother, now 12 years old, is a
    U.S. citizen.

    Sen. Dianne Feinstein introduced a bill Tuesday to allow Arthur and
    his immediate family to stay in the United States. The bill will
    effectively suspend the deportation proceedings until Congress makes a
    decision on the legislation.

    But this is not just a private matter. This case shows why
    U.S. immigration policy needs a fix.

    Last year, Congress nearly passed the DREAM Act, which would have
    given temporary legal status to kids who arrived in the United States
    before age 16, have lived here for five years, graduated from a
    U.S. high school and have no criminal record.

    The bargain is that if they go to college or join the U.S. military,
    they can get green cards within six years -- putting them on a path to
    citizenship.

    But a filibuster killed it. Presidential candidates Sens. John McCain
    of Arizona and Barack Obama of Illinois should revive that
    bill. McCain originally was a co-sponsor. Obama, a supporter, said he
    would "fight to bring this legislation back for another vote as soon
    as possible."

    Now is the time. Students such as Mkoyan have been trained here and
    brought up as Americans. We should do everything we can to tap their
    talents for the United States.
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