More young aliens seen earning degrees

Despite status, many find jobs, too

— Going to college seemed inconceivable when Adriana Sanchez, the 12-year-old daughter of farm workers, was taken from Mexico to Central California and the family members overstayed their visas.

Even though Sanchez excelled in high school, she was in the country illegally, lacked a Social Security number and work permit, and didn’t qualify for financial aid. But she volunteered hundreds of hours and paid her way through college and graduate school with a dozen internships.

Now 24, Sanchez graduated last week from California State University, Fresno, with a master’s degree in international relations, a full-time job and no loans to repay. Using a gray area in federal law, she works as an independent contractor.

With thousands of young adults who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children now holding college degrees, Sanchez and others are finding creative ways to get around the legal roadblocks and find a career. They are getting work experience, opening businesses and seeking professional licenses in their fields.

The Associated Press interviewed about two dozen such graduates across the country. Some, like many legal graduates, are struggling in a tight economy. But others do highly-skilled work, though not always in their professions. Many are “out” about their status despite the risk of deportation; a few asked not to be identified for fear it could cost them their jobs or alert immigration authorities.

“There’s a pool of talented young people who in their hearts believe they’re American, because they’re raised and educated here, speak fluent English and have a level of education that equals or surpasses that of average Americans,” said Roberto Gonzales, a University of Chicago sociology professor who has collected data on hundreds of such young adults. “Our colleges don’t teach them to be undocumented immigrants.”

The growth in young illegal aliens with college degrees is spurred by demographics — children who crossed the border with their parents are coming of age — and by laws granting illegal aliens in-state tuition, Gonzales said. Eleven years ago, California and Texas passed such laws, followed by a dozen other states.

No one knows how many illegal aliens are enrolled in colleges or have graduated; schools don’t collect such data. But in 2010, an estimated 96,000 young adults without legal status held at least an associate’s degree or higher, according to a report from the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan Washington think tank.

What motivated them, Sanchez said, was hope for the passage of federal legislation that would provide a path to citizenship for those who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children and attended college.

But 11 years later, the DREAM Act — the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors measure — is in political gridlock.

Many like Sanchez — who once dreamed of a career with the U.S. Department of State — are driven to find meaningful work without papers.

Front Section, Pages 10 on 05/27/2012

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