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New York State Acts To Provide College Aid For Undocumented Immigrants

Matt Ryan
/
New York Now
Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie speaks just before the Assembly approved the Dream Act on Wednesday. The family of late Senator Jose Peralta, who was a champion of the measure, looks on. Assembly sponsor Carmen De La Rosa is on the right.

The New York State legislature approved a measure known as the Dream Act that would offer college aid for children of undocumented immigrants. But they stopped short of acting on a measure to offer driver’s licenses to immigrants in New York without documentation.

Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, at an announcement packed with young immigrants seeking to go to college, speaking just before the vote, celebrated the measure’s expected success.

“Today we will pass the Dream Act for the ninth and final time,” Heastie said as the crowd cheered.

Unlike in past years, when Republicans in the State Senate blocked the bill, Democrats who now lead that chamber also approved the measure, and Governor Andrew Cuomo is also a supporter.

Assemblywoman Catalina Cruz was an active member of the Dreamer movement before she was elected to the State Assembly last fall.

Cruz came to the U.S. with her mother when she was a child, to escape the drug wars in Colombia. She overstayed her visa and was undocumented for 13 years, until she became a citizen when she married her high school boyfriend. She became a labor and immigration lawyer. She said the law is one step towards eliminating the discrimination that undocumented immigrants face.

“Our parents have contributed millions of dollars into the New York state economy, and we have contributed millions of dollars into the New York state economy,” Cruz said. “Yet we are not seen as human because we don’t have a piece of paper. That’s not fair.”

The Dream Act was renamed the Jose Peralta New York State Dream Act, after the late senator who died suddenly of complications from acute leukemia at the age of 47 last November. Peralta, a Democrat from Queens, was a tireless backer of the Dream Act. He even joined the now-defunct Independent Democratic Conference in hopes of advancing the measure in the Senate. But that proved his political undoing, and he lost his seat in a primary last September.    

His wife, Evelyn Peralta, attended the announcement, and witnessed the vote, along with her children. She said the issue was a “labor of love” for her late husband.

“Today my husband’s dreams become our reality,” Peralta said. “The spirit of my husband is alive in this room today.”

GOP members in both houses voted against the bill.

Senator Robert Ortt, a Republican who represents a district in the Buffalo–Niagara Falls region, said the $27 million in college aid to undocumented immigrants is not fair to middle class New York residents who are struggling with college costs. He said many of his constituents hold large student loan debts.

“They not only have to struggle to pay off their loans,” Ortt said. “But they also know that their dollars are going to pay for illegal immigrants. When we can take care of every American citizen who is here legally and who has played by the rules, and paid into the system, then we can talk about those who are not.”

The Senate also voted to raise the family income eligibility for the state’s Tuition Assistance Program from $80,000 to $95,000 a year.

The Assembly did not take up the measure. Assembly Speaker Heastie said it will be discussed as part of the budget.

Immigrants’ rights groups are also seeking access to drivers’ licenses for undocumented immigrants. The sponsor of the Dream Act in the Assembly, Carmen De La Rosa, said the measure is more than just a “box” checked off the agenda, and more needs to be done.

“We must make sure that a driver’s license bill is passed,” De La Rosa said. “This is about an immigrant community in New York State that needs protections.”

That bill was not voted on Wednesday. Speaker Heastie said his Democratic members plan to discuss the issue soon.

Karen has covered state government and politics for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 New York and Connecticut stations, since 1990. She is also a regular contributor to the statewide public television program about New York State government, New York Now. She appears on the reporter’s roundtable segment, and interviews newsmakers.