As the 2020 crusade renews talks on immigration reform, UCLA’s Policy and Policy Initiative for Latin America published a policy note on the benefits of prestige of transitional coverage, a prestige of immigration that allows others from specific countries to temporarily remain in the United States if they can’. t safely return home due to a catastrophic event.
Of the approximately 400,000 people living in the United States under the program, more than 70% have lived there for more than 20 years, and about two-thirds have children born in the United States, suggesting the significant destabilizing effect that can be caused through the adjustments proposed through the Trump administration.
In 2018, management proposed eliminating coverage for others in Haiti, Honduras and El Salvador, who together make up the largest contingent of citizens with transitority coverage status. a series of lawsuits filed through others in the program.
The UCLA study found that more than 88% of citizens with prestige in transitional coverage are in the workforce and nearly 11% are self-employed, compared to only 7. 2% of naturalized immigrants. immigrants (31. 9% vs. 64. 7%) and are less likely to have fitness insurance (77. 7% vs. 88. 3%).
“As we have noticed with the Deferred Action Program for Arrived Children, there are benefits in getting others out of the shadows,” said Sonja Díaz, founding director of the Latino Policy and Policy Initiative. “At a time when immigrants played a key role in maintaining the economy as essential staff in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is vitally important to perceive what is at stake when immigrant coverage such as prestigious transitional coverages are eliminated. “
The study recommends two movements for the long-term integration of immigrants with transitory coverage status:
“The purpose of the recommendations is to ensure the stability and certainty that allow immigrants to continue living a healthy life with greater economic opportunities,” said Cecilia Menjovar, exam writer and professor of sociology at UCLA.
“Providing a legal path for immigrants to fully participate in their communities has shown that time and again it has been a victory for everyone in the communities in which they live,” Menjovar said. “While the election season sparks discussions about immigration reform, the knowledge presented in the report shows the desire to provide GST holders with permanent immigration status that allows them to live their lives to the fullest without constant concern of deportation.
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