Nevada, District 3

Nevada, District 3

DACA Engineer and Homeowner Seeks Protection for His Family

DACA Engineer and Homeowner Seeks Protection for His Family

Cesar Rodriguez is an accomplished 24-year-old. He holds a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering, works full time as a design engineer, owns two homes, in Nashville, Tennessee, and does volunteer work with young people. But next year, unless Congress takes action, Rodriguez could be forced to leave his job, his… Read More

‘Becoming a Citizen Would Mean Finally Being Accepted in My Own Country’

‘Becoming a Citizen Would Mean Finally Being Accepted in My Own Country’

Like her parents, Leslie Arreaza is an undocumented immigrant. But while her parents are still working hard in low-paid jobs, Arreaza is majoring in psychology at Meredith College, working at a student-run preschool for children with autism, and dreaming of a career as a high school psychologist or counselor. “There’s… Read More

Iraqi Military Interpreter Yearns to Serve U.S. Through Teaching

Iraqi Military Interpreter Yearns to Serve U.S. Through Teaching

Safwat Al Baali is grateful for his housekeeping job at the Cosmopolitan Hotel, on the glittery Las Vegas strip. After scraping by for seven months upon receiving political asylum, he is thrilled to be averaging $17.25 an hour with tips. “My life is so good now,” he says. Al Baali… Read More

Dominican-American Contractor Keeps Dozens of U.S. Workers Employed

Dominican-American Contractor Keeps Dozens of U.S. Workers Employed

“We are growing a little too fast now, it’s even scary,” confesses Vladimir Breton, a naturalized U.S. citizen who immigrated to the United States from the Dominican Republic in 2002. His plumbing and construction businesses have approximately 25 employees and contractors, most of whom are Americans. They’ve been up and… Read More

This Syrian-Born Doctor is Helping to Alleviate Nevada’s Physician Shortage

This Syrian-Born Doctor is Helping to Alleviate Nevada’s Physician Shortage

It took the University of Nevada School of Medicine in Las Vegas three years to fill a job opening for a pediatric gastroenterologist. This is hardly a surprise given the nationwide shortage of physicians with a pediatric subspecialty, a shortage that means families often have to wait months… Read More

Executive Grants of Temporary Immigration Relief, 1956-Present

Executive Grants of Temporary Immigration Relief, 1956-Present

Much has been made of President Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, through which he deferred deportation for young adults brought to the U.S. as children. But as immigration legal scholar Hiroshi Motomura has noted, the president has broad executive authority to shape the enforcement and implementation of immigration laws, including exercising prosecutorial discretion to defer deportations and streamline certain adjudications. In fact, history books reveal that President Obama’s action follows a long line of presidents who relied on their executive branch authority to address immigration challenges. Read More

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