Pedro Ramirez

RECENT POSTS

Top five immigration stories of 2010, #2: The Dream Act

Photo by Leslie Berestein Rojas/KPCC

A student's bold statement, December 8, 2010

The Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act wasn’t new when 2010 rolled around. The proposed legislation, which would have granted conditional legal status to undocumented young people who attended college or joined the military, had already been knocking around Congress for almost a decade when it was reintroduced last year.

Still, this year has been the Dream Act’s biggest by far. After failing as an attachment to a Senate defense bill voted down in September, it was introduced again as a stand-alone bill. In December, it came as close as it ever has to becoming law, clearing the House Dec. 8, but falling five votes short of cloture in the Senate ten days later. The most recent version, tightened and reintroduced in late November, would have allowed young people under 30 to apply for legal status if they met all the requirements, including having arrived before age 16.

What made the Dream Act one of the year’s most significant immigration stories, however, is less its close brush with success as the unprecedented student movement that carried the bill forward. Undocumented college students around the country went public with their status, many of them risking arrest and deportation as they participated in caravans to Washington, D.C. to stage rallies and sit-ins. They and other students, including U.S. citizen friends and classmates, manned makeshift phone banks before each vote, dialing legislators for their support.

Some went public with their status voluntarily, including prominent students like David Cho, drum major of the UCLA Bruin Marching Band, and Jose Salcedo, a student leader in Miami. One of the best-remembered stories was that of CSU Fresno’s student body president Pedro Ramirez, a high school valedictorian who had tried to keep his status a secret, but was outed in the campus newspaper. After confirming that he was undocumented – his family brought him here when he was three – he expressed relief about opening up. He then joined the student movement.

The Dream Act was supported by a slim majority of U.S. voters, according to one poll, but it produced bitter controversy between supporters and opponents, who argued that, among other things, it would increase overall immigration as its beneficiaries gradually became able to sponsor relatives, and that it would cost money. A Congressional Budget Office report estimated that the bill would reduce the federal deficit by $1.4 billion over the first 10 years, though costs would rise eventually as the youths became permanent legal residents and U.S. citizens, eligible for the same social benefits as other Americans.

Last week, President Obama referred to the Dream Act’s defeat as his “biggest disappointment.” Students and other supporters have vowed to continue pushing for the legislation, though its chances of success during the next two years appear slim to none. Republican leaders, poised to take leadership of the House, have stated that they will pursue more stringent immigration measures, among them enforcement-related bills and a challenge to the 14th Amendment, which presently grants U.S. citizenship to those born here, including the children of undocumented immigrants.

Other top immigration stories of the year reviewed this week in Multi-American: Secure Communities and 287(g), the Obama administration’s record deportations, and last summer’s massacre of U.S.-bound migrants in the Mexican border state of Tamaulipas.

Not one, but two, undocumented student leaders have come out this week: So what, or now what?

Photo by un.sospiro/Flickr (Creative Commons)

From a graduation ceremony in Washington, D.C., June 2010

In the past two days, two prominent student leaders – one in Fresno, one in Miami – have revealed that they are undocumented. Earlier this week, CSU Fresno’s student body president Pedro Ramirez, 22, confirmed his status to reporters. On Wednesday, 19-year-old José Salcedo revealed during a keynote speech at a student rally held at Miami Dade College’s InterAmerican campus in Little Havana that he, too, is undocumented.

Ramirez, born in Mexico and here since he was three, is an academic star who was valedictorian of his graduating senior class in high school. Salcedo, born in Colombia and also here since childhood, is a student representative on the trustees board for Miami Dade College and a member of the school’s Honors College, a distinction awarded only to 550 elite students on campus, according to the Miami Herald.

Not exactly slackers.

So what should their fate be? In the short term, is there a problem with their serving as student leaders? And in the long term, should these high achievers be granted a shot at legal status or not?

There are hot debates going on about these two things – along with tangentially-related ranting – on several news websites that have reported the two students’ stories. The Los Angeles Times has posted a short item seeking reader feedback on the question, “Should an illegal immigrant be student body president at Fresno State?” A snippet of the conversation:

From John Lieto:

Only if he is paying out of state tuition rates.

From “Marley:”

He is breaking the law and should be arrested. Also, I don’t believe that he didn’t know he was illegal until high school.

From “Victoria:”

Who cares? If he is smart, and got enough votes, live and let live.

Continue reading

Über-achiever student? Check. Undocumented? Check.

Photo by Josh Self/Flickr (Creative Commons)

Graduation cap and accoutrements, October 2010

A university student body president and former high school valedictorian, undocumented? Yes, and it shouldn’t surprise anyone.

CSU Fresno’s campus daily, The Collegian, revealed the immigration status of student body president Pedro Ramirez yesterday after contacting him regarding an anonymous tip, an e-mail sent to the daily alleging that Ramirez was serving as president without pay because he was undocumented. While he had not been out in the open about his status, save for with school administrators, Ramirez confirmed it.

From the story:

Ramirez said that ASI administrators were aware that he would not be paid for the ASI position, but he willfully accepted it as a volunteer position.

“For me, it’s an emotional issue,” Ramirez said. “Not a lot of people know that I am undocumented. A lot of people I got to class with…students, faculty, staff and staff administrators think I’m a normal student.”

Ramirez, an AB 540 student, didn’t know of his legal status until his senior year of high school before his graduation.

AB 540 is a California state law that allows eligible undocumented students to pay in-state tuition fees instead of the more costly out-of state fees.

The Los Angeles Times reported this afternoon that Ramirez, who was born in Mexico, has lived in the United States since he was three years old. In what is a fairly common scenario, he only learned from his parents that he wasn’t a U.S. citizen when he was applying to college.

Now that his story is known, Ramirez, a 22-year-old political science major, has come out in support of the DREAM Act, proposed federal legislation that would allow students like him a shot at legal status, along with undocumented youth enlising in the military. A vote is expected at the end of the month.

Ramirez is not the only college student who has achieved high-profile success on campus while lacking legal status, which in spite of AB 540 – just upheld this week by the state Supreme Court – presents other obstacles, including a lack of access to public financial aid.

Another is UCLA Bruin Marching Band drum major David Cho, who has been a vocal proponent of the DREAM Act. In August Cho, a Korean-American who also arrived here as a child, discussed his immigration status on the social-justice blog Citizen Orange as part of collection of posts titled “DREAM Now Series: Letters to Obama.”

Continue reading