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Looking North, Looking South: DREAMers Not Waiting On Congress

For the past six years, nearly 800,000 immigrants brought to the United States as young children were given a temporary reprieve from deportation that was slated to be repeated every two years. When the program was halted last September, former President Barack Obama wrote: "This is about young people who grew up in America — kids who study in our schools, young adults who are starting careers, patriots who pledge allegiance to our flag. These DREAMers are Americans in their hearts, in their minds, in every single way but one: on paper."

Even before then, DREAMers were at the center of nearly every immigration plan introduced on Capitol Hill. They've been weighed as bargaining chips for a $25 billion border wall, a cornerstone of President Donald Trump's campaign, and they've been caste as a costly expenditure in the bitter recriminations of the past two government shutdowns.

President Trump warned that Congress was running out of time to decide what to do with DREAMers, writing via Twitter, Feb. 13:

By last Thursday, most of those negotiations came to an end, leaving Dreamers stuck at the impasse with the March 5 deadline weeks away.

The Fronteras Desk spoke with DREAMers in Mexico and in Arizona who have stopped waiting for Congress and are now looking beyond the 2012 words of President Obama when he said: "This is a temporary stopgap measure that lets us focus our resources wisely while giving a degree of relief and hope to talented, driven, patriotic young people. It is the right thing to do."

You will hear from young business owners in Phoenix, worried realtors who see successful home buyers slipping away and young people who have already left this country, returned home and taking their talents and ambitions with them.


Matthew Casey has won Edward R. Murrow awards for hard news and sports reporting since he joined KJZZ as a senior field correspondent in 2015.