Suit claims officials delay immigrants’ work permits

Article author: 
Gosia Wozniacka
Article publisher: 
The Register Guard
Article date: 
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
Article category: 
National Issues
Medium
Article Body: 


PORTLAND — A new lawsuit alleges that federal immigration officials routinely delay issuing employment authorization documents to eligible immigrants...

...immigrants who are renewing their work authorization also are at risk: They can lose their jobs, benefits and, in some states, their driver’s licenses.

As a result, immigrants can’t support themselves and their families while their immigration applications are pending.

The lawsuit was filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Seattle. It seeks class action status...

Marvella Arcos-Perez from Washington state, an asylum applicant and one of the plaintiffs in the suit, has waited for her work authorization renewal since early January.

According to the suit, Arcos-Perez is a widow who supports a daughter with disabilities through a job at a mattress company, but could lose the job without authorization to work.

Another plaintiff, Carmen Osorio-Ballesteros from Illinois, has waited for her work authorization since December.

Osorio-Ballesteros previously was approved for the federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which gives young people brought into the United States illegally as children temporary legal status and a two-year work permit.

According to the suit, she applied as required to renew that status, but the work permit has yet to arrive.

A mother of three U.S. citizen children, Osorio-Ballesteros lost her full-time job when her work authorization expired in April.

The USCIS declined to comment because the issue is under active litigation.