Spare 'documented Dreamers' from deportation, tech giants tell Biden
official
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[June 07, 2022]
By Paresh Dave
(Reuters) - The Biden administration must
protect young adults who could lose U.S. immigration status because of
processing delays for permanent residency, tech companies including
Amazon.com Inc and Alphabet Inc's Google said on Tuesday.
After turning 21, foreigners can no longer stay in the United States
under parents' work visas. If applications for their own visas are not
processed by that birthday - as is often happening amid pandemic-induced
delays - they must leave.
Unlike millions of undocumented immigrants popularly known as "Dreamers"
who have become eligible for temporary work permits, these "documented
Dreamers" - a group that numbers over 200,000 - have not received
relief.
Record-low unemployment across the country has left businesses concerned
about losing prospective employees.
In a letter to U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas late
Monday, the tech companies joined with industry and lawyer associations
to urge him "to establish more robust aging out policies" that would let
young people remain in the United States as long as permanent residency
applications were under review.
Karan Bhatia, Google vice president of government
affairs and public policy, said the administration could provide a
temporary reprieve by interpreting regulations more favorably.
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Demonstrators calling for new protections for so-called "Dreamers,"
undocumented children brought to the U.S. by their immigrant
parents, walk through a Senate office building on Capitol Hill in
Washington, U.S. January 17, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
Google also supports lawmakers' bipartisan efforts to pass the
America's Children Act, which would provide documented Dreamers a
pathway to citizenship.
Uncertainty over their children's status has discouraged some Google
employees from working in the United States, Bhatia told Reuters.
"There is intense competition in the world to be at that
technological edge, and the only way you get to that technological
edge is by having the world's best talent," he said.
"We do have our highest and innovative work in the United States, so
for these folks to be fully utilized, it would be optimal to have
them in the United States."
Other signatories of the letter included IBM, Salesforce.com Inc,
Twitter Inc and Uber Technologies Inc.
(Reporting by Paresh Dave in Oakland, Calif.; Editing by Bradley
Perrett)
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