NEW WEST FEATURE
Born Abroad, Raised Here, Some Immigrant Students Pin Futures on Dream Act
Opponents call the Dream Act amnesty. Supporters like Alex Alvarado call it a future.By David Frey, 11-29-10
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| Carbondale, Colo., high school senior Alex Alvarado has become an activist for the Dream Act. David Frey photo. | |
It was the end of the school day, and Alex Alvarado was hunching over his Spanish test. Although he grew up speaking Spanish at home, he never learned formal grammar. Besides, he needs language classes for college, and college is definitely in his plans.
Exactly how he’ll get there, though, and what he’ll do afterward, is in question.
Like many at Roaring Fork High School in Carbondale, Colo., Alvarado has spent nearly all his life in this country, but he wasn’t born here. Now a 17-year-old senior, Alvarado faces an uncertain future. He’s undocumented in the only country he knows and a stranger in the country of his birth.
“I can’t see myself in Mexico at all,” he said. “I’m from there. I wouldn’t be ashamed of going there. But it’s not my home. I don’t know anybody there. I might have family there, but I don’t know them.”
Alvarado has become an activist for the Dream Act, a measure designed to give people like him a path to citizenship. Outgoing House speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid plan to bring the legislation to a vote this year in Congress’ lame duck session. President Barack Obama supports it. But it’s failed before and Republicans are sharpening their opposition.
Although the bill, officially called the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act, was first introduced in 2001 as a bipartisan measure by Sens. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Dick Durban, D-Ill., conservatives are lining up against it. A Republican white paper by Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., calls it amnesty and says it “would give college preference to illegals over citizens.” (See it on Politco here.)
The Dream Act would give people ages 12 to 35 who came to this country illegally a path to citizenship if they go to college or enlist in the military. The law would apply to those who entered the country before the age of 16, have lived here at least five years and graduated from high school, obtained a GED or have been accepted into college.
Dream Act supporters say some 65,000 undocumented high school students graduate each year nationwide. The nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute estimates more than 2.1 million young people could be eligible to apply for legal status under the act, but because of its requirements for education or military service, only 38 percent would likely receive it.
Rocky Mountain states, where hotels, restaurants, construction sites and farms rely on illegal labor, have some of the highest number of potential beneficiaries. Arizona, Colorado, Nevada and Utah are among the top 10 states, where 75 percent of the potential beneficiaries live.
Immigration in the Rockies outpaces the nation as a whole, and the region has some of the highest rates of illegal immigration in the country. In Nevada and New Mexico, nearly half the immigrant population is believed to be undocumented.
Foes see the Dream Act as amnesty. “Clearly the message being sent by the Dream Act will be that if any young person can enter the country illegally, within five years they will be placed on a path to citizenship,” Sessions wrote.
The conservative Heritage Foundation has seized on the same fears. “Packing amnesty in pretty paper doesn’t mean it isn’t still an amnesty,” wrote Jena McNeill, homeland security policy analyst for the foundation.
Alvarado said he worries Republicans who might otherwise support the bill will oppose it simply to cheat Democrats out of a victory. “Putting our lives at risk just to make it some competition, it’s pretty unjust,” he said.
With his boyish grin, Alvarado looks like an all-American kid. He’s student body co-president and a four-time homecoming king. His blue-and-gold letter jacket is a reminder that he plays on the varsity soccer team. In his wide, flat-brimmed ball cap, hoodie and baggy pants, he mixes with schoolmates both Anglo and Latino. His friends have always been a mix of English and Spanish speakers, he said.
Alvarado is all-but-American, though, and his story is hardly typical. He was less than 2 years old when his parents brought him and his brother from Delicias, Mexico. His father landed in the cherry orchards of Delta County, Colo., before finding construction work in Aspen in the booming Nineties. They came to nearby Carbondale homeless, sleeping in a blue Ford Taurus by the downtown park. His brother, three years older, dimly remembers Mexico. Alvarado’s first memories are of bathing in the irrigation ditch that runs past the park.
When a woman spotted them living out of their car, she brought them to her tiny apartment, where they slept under the dining room table until she moved out and they moved in. Now, his father is in charge of maintenance at the same apartment complex. His mother cleans houses. They live in a trailer at the edge of town.
It’s a modest version of the American Dream. His brother attends a Christian college thanks to a sponsor. Alvarado wants a history degree and a teaching certificate so he can teach at his alma mater.
“I see myself as any other kid,” Alvarado said. “Just because of the way I was brought here and the way I’m living here, being an illegal immigrant holds me back from doing so much.”
About half the Roaring Fork School District’s students are Latino, children of laborers doing the dirty work of the resort economy in and around Aspen. While the school district doesn’t track how many are undocumented, school officials assume many are.
“These are kids who have been in our school districts and in our communities for years and years,” said school board member Debbie Bruell, a Dream Act supporter.
“We’ve been telling them for years and years to work hard and they can succeed and I want them to be able to do that,” said Bruell, who said she was speaking for herself and not for the board.
Recently, Alvarado joined some 100 Dream Act supporters in a rally in nearby Glenwood Springs, Colo. Most were high school students, some who would be affected by the act, some who wouldn’t. Some were teachers and parents. It felt more like a pep rally than a political one. Instead of protest songs, students blasted dance music.
Alvarado took the stage, sharing his story and urging participants to call legislators. In speaking out, he’s taking a big risk, essentially confessing he came here illegally. But Alvarado isn’t shying away.
“What I realized is, in the past, the people who actually changed something had to risk something,” he said.
David Frey writes in Glenwood Springs, Colo. Follow him at www.davidmfrey.com and on Twitter.
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Comments
I watched as federal agents intimidated camera crews who were warned not to film in the Tucson sector area, as they didn't want any recognition of regions signed with warning notices. These are areas where American citizens are confronted with signs declaring these regions were off-limits to citizens, as it was infiltrated by armed drug smugglers and dangerous criminal activities? Since when are American citizens are not allowed to enter their own sovereign lands, no matter the consequences? After the 1970's Washington has assumed responsibility for passing out even more visas to mediocre legal workers who are now unfortunately without work, and now supported by taxpayers welfare.
Chain Migration is the principal mechanism that has caused legal immigration in this country to quadruple from about 250,000 per year in the 1950s and 1960s to over one million a year since 1990. This isn’t counting the 1.5 million immigrants who arrive here, through legal channels annually. Eventually the people sponsored will end up on the taxpayer’s welfare and entitlements program, which happened after the 1986--AMNESTY. As such, it is one of the chief menaces in America's current record-breaking population boom and the record attendant sprawl, traffic congestion, school overcrowding, dwindling energy supplies and other impacts that reduce American's quality of life. This type of immigration is very dangerous to our society as the US population is beginning to see the light, from the costs brought to them in higher taxes from catering to the illegal alien inhabitants by Liberal zealots.
Go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=muw22wTePqQ / on the U-tube website and then you will comprehend the seriousness of this mass immigration and the imminent predicament for this country in overpopulation. Titled, "Immigration by numbers--off the charts" and learn what our previous or current government has kept silent about. The out-of-control population explosion has severe implication on your taxes and this country’s infrastructure.
If parents know their kids aren't going to get citizenship, and may in fact be sent back to Mexico, then maybe they would reconsider coming to America illegally. Perhaps they would try coming legally? Hmmm?
Anyone who is willing to fight for this country deserves to live here. Take college off the table, make the requirement military service and thank them for serving thier new country by making them citizens and sending them to college under the GI bill. I applaud and thank anyone who is willing to risk his or her life to protect my freedom.
Enforce the law feds!