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  1. #1
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    CA: Santa Ana backs bill to help illegal-immigrant students

    Anyone from southern CA knows Santa Ana has been the illegal alien capital of Orange County for decades.
    ~~~

    Tuesday, July 21, 2009
    Santa Ana backs bill to help illegal-immigrant students
    The city passes a symbolic resolution urging Congress to give undocumented students a path to legal residency.
    By DOUG IRVING
    The Orange County Register
    Comments 174| Recommend 6

    SANTA ANA – Leaders in this city – one of the most Latino big cities in America – are urging federal lawmakers to support a bill that would give illegal-immigrant students a path to legal residency.

    The City Council voted 5-0 this week to support the federal D.R.E.A.M. Act, which would also clear the way for undocumented students to get federal loans for their education. The name of the act stands for "Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors."

    The city's resolution is symbolic; the real debate over the proposed act will take place in the halls of Congress, not in Santa Ana's City Hall. But council members said it was important to send a message not just to lawmakers, but also to the young people of Santa Ana.

    "We believe in you," Councilman David Benavides said. "We stand with you."

    The DREAM Act would allow students who are here illegally to apply for legal permanent resident status, protect them from deportation and make them eligible for student loans and federal work study programs.

    Most of Orange County's Congress members have said they would vote against the measure if it comes to the floor for a vote. Only Rep. Loretta Sanchez, D-Santa Ana, has said she would vote for it; but she has not put her name behind the bill as a co-sponsor.

    The bill was sent to committees in both the U.S. Senate and the House of Representatives; no votes are currently scheduled.

    Santa Ana's resolution may carry added weight because the city has more residents of Hispanic heritage, as a percent of its population, than any other city with at least 300,000 people except El Paso, Texas. About 78.5 percent of Santa Ana residents are Hispanic or Latino, according to the latest Census estimates.

    About a dozen people – many of them students – came to the City Council meeting on Monday evening to urge support for the DREAM Act. Several invoked one of the city's mottoes: "Education First."

    Nobody spoke against the city’s resolution, although a recent poll by the Orange County Register found strong opposition to the DREAM Act. More than three-quarters of readers who participated in the poll said they do not think college students who are in the country illegally should be given a path to residency, be protected from deportation or be eligible for student loans.

    Only about 21 percent of the 1,631 readers who participated in the poll said they support the idea.

    "This is what the DREAM Act is about, education," said Councilwoman Michele Martinez, who put the city's resolution in support of the bill on the agenda.

    "When we talk about the American Dream, we talk about having a great time, having a family," she said. "But the foundation of that American Dream is education."

    www.ocregister.com
    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  2. #2
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    CA: Santa Ana backs bill to help illegal-immigrant students

    Anyone from southern CA knows Santa Ana has been the illegal alien capital of Orange County for decades.
    ~~~

    Tuesday, July 21, 2009
    Santa Ana backs bill to help illegal-immigrant students
    The city passes a symbolic resolution urging Congress to give undocumented students a path to legal residency.
    By DOUG IRVING
    The Orange County Register
    Comments 174| Recommend 6

    SANTA ANA – Leaders in this city – one of the most Latino big cities in America – are urging federal lawmakers to support a bill that would give illegal-immigrant students a path to legal residency.

    The City Council voted 5-0 this week to support the federal D.R.E.A.M. Act, which would also clear the way for undocumented students to get federal loans for their education. The name of the act stands for "Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors."

    The city's resolution is symbolic; the real debate over the proposed act will take place in the halls of Congress, not in Santa Ana's City Hall. But council members said it was important to send a message not just to lawmakers, but also to the young people of Santa Ana.

    "We believe in you," Councilman David Benavides said. "We stand with you."

    The DREAM Act would allow students who are here illegally to apply for legal permanent resident status, protect them from deportation and make them eligible for student loans and federal work study programs.

    Most of Orange County's Congress members have said they would vote against the measure if it comes to the floor for a vote. Only Rep. Loretta Sanchez, D-Santa Ana, has said she would vote for it; but she has not put her name behind the bill as a co-sponsor.

    The bill was sent to committees in both the U.S. Senate and the House of Representatives; no votes are currently scheduled.

    Santa Ana's resolution may carry added weight because the city has more residents of Hispanic heritage, as a percent of its population, than any other city with at least 300,000 people except El Paso, Texas. About 78.5 percent of Santa Ana residents are Hispanic or Latino, according to the latest Census estimates.

    About a dozen people – many of them students – came to the City Council meeting on Monday evening to urge support for the DREAM Act. Several invoked one of the city's mottoes: "Education First."

    Nobody spoke against the city’s resolution, although a recent poll by the Orange County Register found strong opposition to the DREAM Act. More than three-quarters of readers who participated in the poll said they do not think college students who are in the country illegally should be given a path to residency, be protected from deportation or be eligible for student loans.

    Only about 21 percent of the 1,631 readers who participated in the poll said they support the idea.

    "This is what the DREAM Act is about, education," said Councilwoman Michele Martinez, who put the city's resolution in support of the bill on the agenda.

    "When we talk about the American Dream, we talk about having a great time, having a family," she said. "But the foundation of that American Dream is education."

    www.ocregister.com
    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  3. #3
    Senior Member CitizenJustice's Avatar
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    The "latino's" have bankrupted California, now they want to spend OUR money???????????

  4. #4
    Senior Member CitizenJustice's Avatar
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    Aug 2007
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    Pennsylvania
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    The "latino's" have bankrupted California, now they want to spend OUR money???????????

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