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New DACA Rule Welcome, But Far From Enough

Posted on Aug 25 2022

New DACA Rule Welcome, But Far From Enough

August 25, 2022—The Biden administration yesterday announced a final version of the DACA rule that it initially proposed in 2021. The “new” rule codifies the 2012 Napolitano memo establishing DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals), putting DACA into the Federal Register as an official regulation. It will take effect on October 31.

This new rule does not expand eligibility, or re-open DACA for first time applicants. Nor does it authorize processing applications from the nearly 80,000 young people who applied in 2021 and are awaiting a decision on their cases. This new rule does not impact the status of current DACA recipients. Immigrant youth who have aged into eligibility since 2017 and hundreds of thousands of other immigrants who were never able to apply remain locked out of the program.

“DACA is not enough,” said Jenny Stohl Powell, legal director of the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota (ILCM). “DACA has offered a lifeline to more than 800,000 young people, but it is only a temporary and limited fix. Congress must act to provide a path to citizenship for Dreamers, who contribute so much to our country and communities.”

DACA—Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals—was instituted by the Obama administration in 2012 to offer protection from deportation to young people who arrived in this country before June 2007; were under the age of 16 when they arrived; were still living here in June 2012; studied in a U.S. school or served in the military; and lack any serious criminal record. The new rule will keep the 2012 DACA provisions in place, but officially puts them in the Code of Federal Regulations.

Yesterday’s announcement comes after reviewing 16,361 comments to the 2021 proposed rule. The entire 435-page rule is available here— https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection/2022-18401/deferred-action-for-childhood-arrivals —and is summarized in a much-shorter press release from the Department of Homeland Security here.

“DACA is right and legal and it has helped hundreds of thousands of young people finish school, apply for a work permit, and be protected from detention and deportation,” said Stohl Powell. “Current DACA recipients should continue to file for renewal well in advance of the expiration of their DACA status. Everyone should beware of any social media or other messages offering to process applications under the new rule or reserve ‘a place in line.’ No new applications will be accepted because of pending litigation, and there is no line.”