AP (Nebraska)
By Grant Schulte
August 10, 2015
Nebraska
has issued 1,300 driver's licenses to youths who were brought into the
country illegally since the state became the last in the nation to let
them apply.
Lawmakers
voted May 28 to end the state ban on driving privileges for those who
were allowed to stay in the U.S. under the federal deferred-action
program. The state law
took effect the next day, and the Nebraska Department of Motor Vehicles
immediately saw between 50 and 70 applicants per day, Director Rhonda
Lahm said. She didn't know whether the daily numbers have declined.
Nearly
half of the applicants came from the state's two largest counties,
according to the Nebraska Department of Motor Vehicles, which issued 427
licenses in Douglas
County, including Omaha, and 133 in Lincoln and surrounding Lancaster
County.
The third-largest number of licenses issued was in Hall County, including Grand Island, with 123.
One
such recipient is Yajaira Gonzalez, a 20-year-old whose parents brought
her to Omaha from Mexico shortly before her ninth birthday.
"It
felt like I could be part of the society I've always grown up in," she
said of obtaining the license just days after the law went into effect.
The
University of Nebraska Omaha junior had relied on her father to drive
her to school and work, at a time when he was working 13-hour days. Now,
Gonzalez said, she routinely
helps drive her younger sister to a babysitter and takes her mother
grocery shopping.
The deferred-action policy, announced by President Barack Obama in 2012,
gives certain youths a Social Security number, a two-year work permit
and protection from deportation.
Although a few states initially announced they'd deny licenses to those
youths, only Arizona and Nebraska ultimately adopted such policies and a
court blocked Arizona's law.
Lawmakers
overrode a veto 34-10 from Republican Gov. Pete Ricketts, who had
backed the administrative policy enacted by former Gov. Dave Heineman.
Ricketts said in his
veto letter that those who arrived in the country illegally shouldn't
receive privileges intended for legal residents.
But
senators countered that many of the teens actively contribute to the
state economy and shouldn't face punishment for their parents' actions.
The law also had support
from agricultural and business groups and prominent state Republicans,
such as Omaha Mayor Jean Stothert.
Advocates say allowing the youths to get licensed helped put Nebraska in line with the rest of the country.
"For
so many of these kids, this is the only country they've ever known,"
said Charles Shane Ellison, deputy executive director of the Omaha-based
Justice for our Neighbors.
"The passage of this law has made a huge difference for them. There's a
sense that you're part of the community."
Getting
a license made it easier for Fatima Flores-Lagunas, 24, to get to
doctor's appointments and to buy medicine for her allergies. Before
that, the University of Nebraska
Omaha junior said she struggled to do simple things like rent a table
for her sister's baby shower.
"It's more than just a piece of plastic," she said. "It's your identity."
The
state previously granted licenses to other kinds of deferred-action recipients, Ellison said, such as those who were abused by their
parents, children or spouses.
The
Nebraska DMV estimated in March that the measure would generate about
$38,000 for the state and counties combined if 2,300 deferred-action recipients were to apply.
Lahm
said it's too difficult to calculate the exact revenue between May 29
and Aug. 5, because some youths might have taken driving tests multiple
times.
The
federal government had received nearly 3,300 requests for
deferred-action status in Nebraska as of March 31, according to the most
recent data from the U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services. Of that number, 2,877 have been approved.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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