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  • Feinstein uses private bills to block deportations

    McClatchy Washington Bureau
    May 6, 2011 Friday


    Feinstein uses private bills to block deportations

    BY: Michael Doyle; McClatchy Newspapers


    WASHINGTON - Fresno resident Nayely Arreola was a high school junior
    when a U.S. senator first protected her from deportation. The year:
    2003.

    Nayely is now 25, newly married and a graduate of Fresno Pacific
    University. She and her family still remain protected, thanks to
    special bills that need not pass to exert influence.

    "Perhaps the greatest hardship to this family, if forced to return to
    Mexico, will be (Nayely's) lost opportunity to realize her dreams and
    further contribute to her community and this country," Democratic Sen.
    Dianne Feinstein
    Enhanced Coverage LinkingSen. Dianne Feinstein -Search using:
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    declared.

    As she has regularly since 2003, Feinstein in March re-introduced a
    so-called private bill on behalf of the Arreola family. It effectively
    blocks deportation, even without final approval from Congress.

    Private bills, though controversial in some circles, have become a
    part of Feinstein's arsenal.

    Feinstein this year has introduced 13 private bills to block
    deportations, more than any other member of Congress. Her private
    bills account for one-fifth of the 64 private bills introduced in the
    entire House and Senate, records show.

    Each bill would grant specific individuals legal U.S. residency. To
    balance the immigration books, each bill correspondingly reduces the
    number of visas available to others. All told, Feinstein's 13 bills
    would grant 28 illegal immigrants U.S. residency.

    Once introduced, the bills essentially freeze immigration enforcement
    actions. Consequently, the private bills reintroduced every Congress
    amount to permanent ad hoc solutions.

    "It's been a huge blessing to have these bills," Nayely said Friday.

    Nayely Arreola Carlos, as she is now known, works as an admissions
    counselor at Fresno Pacific while she's studying for a master's in
    business administration. The private bills, she said, have opened
    opportunities including her undergraduate scholarship.

    Nayely's father, Esidronio, first entered the United States illegally
    in 1986 as a migrant farmworker. Feinstein said "poor legal
    representation" by a subsequently disbarred attorney cost Esidronio
    and his wife, Maria Elena, a conventional shot at legal residency.

    Even under the private bill shield, though, Nayely acknowledged
    anxiety. Every year, her family is reinvestigated. The future brings
    uncertainty.

    "Not knowing what happens if Senator Feinstein
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    is no longer in office," Nayely said, describing her big looming concern.

    Fresno truck driver Ruben Mkoian and his family have likewise stayed
    in the United States with the help of private bills repeatedly
    introduced by Feinstein. So has a San Bruno couple from Laos and
    Taiwan, a Pacifica resident from the Philippines and a Reedley family
    originally from Mexico, among others.

    Critics call the private bills a bad habit. In the past, some private
    bills in particular have given lawmakers a black eye.

    Last year, reflecting in part the congressional discomfort, only two
    private bills were signed into law. One was Feinstein's. In 2009, no
    private bill became law.

    "Private bills should only be used for very extraordinary
    circumstances, not just because someone is a good student," said Mark
    Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies.

    While acknowledging that "there is a potential role" for rare private
    bills, Krikorian warned that "the danger is that they become a goodie
    you can give to friends and supporters." Choosing beneficiaries can
    also become very subjective, he cautioned.

    Gregory Chen, advocacy director for the American Immigration Lawyers
    Association, added that private bills require "particularly compelling
    circumstances." Different people can have different ideas of what
    qualifies, he stressed.

    On Friday, noting that "California is a state of 38 million
    residents," Feinstein said she has introduced private bills "on rare
    occasions ... for cases that were compelling, for one reason or
    another."

    Private immigration bills were once common, with hundreds passing
    annually. The Congressional Research Service noted private bills began
    to decline after the 1970s following "a series of corruption scandals
    ... involving payoffs for the sponsorship of private immigration
    laws."

    When she introduces them, Feinstein casts the private bills as justice
    for families filled with high-achievers and hard-workers.

    Ruben Mkoian, for instance, was a police officer in Armenia who was
    reportedly attacked when he blew the whistle on corruption. He, his
    wife, Asmik Karapetian, and their 3-year-old son, Arthur, fled to the
    United States in the early 1990s but eventually were denied political
    asylum.

    Arthur is now a junior at the University of California at Davis,
    studying chemistry.

    "The Mkoians have worked hard to build a place for their family in
    California," Feinstein stated.

    In a similar vein, Feinstein in 2004 first introduced a private bill
    to aid the family of Ana Laura Buendia, a straight-A student at
    Reedley High School. Later this year, still protected by the latest
    private bill, Ana Laura will graduate from the University of
    California at Irvine.

    "The Buendias," Feinstein said, "have shown that they are committed to
    working to achieve the American dream."

    McClatchy Newspapers 2011




    From: A. Papazian
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