Teens facing deportation get Capitol Hill support
A powerful Miami lawmaker has joined the fight to keep teenagers Juan and Alex Gomez from being deported.
Posted on Tue, Jul. 31, 2007Digg it del.icio.us reprint or license print email
BY KATHLEEN McGRORY
kmcgrory@MiamiHerald.com

CARL JUSTE/MIAMI HERALD STAFF
Scott Elfenbein works the phone before boarding a plane Tuesday to Washington, D.C., with his classmates. The group planned to lobby federal lawmakers.
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Juan and Alex Gomez, whose fight to avoid deportation started with a few classmates and a laptop computer, have gained a powerful advocate on Capitol Hill: U.S. Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart.

On Monday, Diaz-Balart introduced legislation that would grant both Colombian nationals American residency, preventing them from being expelled with their parents.

Although the bill would only affect the brothers, their case has given fresh resonance to a much broader question: Should the children of undocumented immigrants be granted residency?

Diaz-Balart says yes.

''This case is heartbreaking,'' he told The Miami Herald Monday. ``These boys arrived in the country when they were 2 and 3 years old. The only decision they made was to study hard and make their parents proud.''

Diaz-Balart won't be the only one working the halls of power in Washington on the brothers' behalf. Eight Miami teens boarded a US Airways flight Monday bound for the capital, where they plan to lobby federal lawmakers and meet with the national news media.

The Gomez family -- parents Julio and Liliana and the two boys -- has been in South Florida since 1990, when they arrived on a six-month visitors visa, immigration officials said. They did not leave at the end of six months.

Years later, they went to immigration court to seek legal status, but a judge denied the request, a decision that was upheld on appeal.

Still they did not leave.

In May, Juan Gomez, 18, graduated at the top of his class from Killian High and earned a near-perfect score on his SATs. He was getting ready to start at Miami Dade College's Honors College when immigration agents seized him and his family.

That's when Juan Gomez's friends stepped in.

The teens started a grass-roots campaign to save the brothers on Face

book.com, the social networking site. They urged their classmates to contact local legislators in hopes to staving off the boys' deportation order.

The teens also rallied in support of the DREAM Act, separate, broad-based legislation that would provide a path to citizenship for the children of undocumented immigrants.

''Originally, we just wanted to save our friends,'' said Scott Elfenbein, 18, the recent Killian grad leading the charge. ``Now, we're realizing that there is a massive need for immigration reform, especially for positive members of society.''

Less than a week later, more than 1,500 teens had joined the virtual assemblage. They caught the attention of several local lawmakers, including Diaz-Balart and Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, both Miami Republicans.

Diaz-Balart's bill would not allow the boys' parents to remain in the country, since they knowingly overstayed their visa, Diaz-Balart said.

If the bill is heard this week by the House immigration subcommittee, it's possible the deportation order could be stayed. Traditionally, a House staffer said, the Department of Homeland Security stays deportation orders -- for as long as the two-year congressional term -- if the subcommittee agrees to take up the matter.

The DREAM Act, designed to help children of immigrants become residents, garnered early support among Democrats, but hasn't been brought to a vote. Opponents worry it could grant amnesty to an estimated 65,000 immigrant students each year.

Some Congress watchers believe the Gomez boys could become the new face of the bill, helping to nudge it toward approval.

Local immigrant advocates say they're delighted.

''This could really make a difference,'' said Cheryl Little, executive director of the Florida Immigrant Advocacy Center.

``At the very least it gives us some hope that we can keep Juan and Alex around here.''

Equally as delighted: friends of Juan and his 19-year-old sibling, Alex.

On Monday, the friends set up a trust fund for the boys to help with living expenses.

Miami Herald staff writer Lesley Clark contributed to this report.





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