Necessity of dreams In August 2001, Republican Senator Olin Hatch introduced the first iteration of the development, remedy and education of the Foreign Minority Act (or "Dream Law"). The aim is to become an accompanying bill of the 2001 Communist Party Senator Chris Cannon's Student Adjustment Law, which was introduced several months ago. The 2001 Student Adjustment Law allowed the unlawful immigration to be subject to higher education benefits such as state tuition as well as state documented residents, in 1996 illegal immigration control reform It aims to amend the law. Is the same. Immigration and revision of Immigration Bureau
Dream law (development, relief and abbreviation for foreign minor education law) is the US legislation to provide multi-step procedures for foreign minors in the United States. Permanent residence if you are eligible for additional qualification. In the first six years, qualified persons are given the "conditional" status and either (a) graduate from a two-year community college, (b) obtain a four-year degree for four years, or (c ) After two years in the US military for six years, those who meet at least one of these three conditions are entitled to apply for permanent residence. During these six years of conditions, they are not eligible for federal higher education grants like per grants, but they can apply for student loans and work learning.
In 2011, the 112th Congress introduced a dream (Development, Relief and Education for Foreign Minors) bill. If passed, the law allows undocumented students to begin the six-year process and if they have other requirements, they will come to the United States at age of at least 5 years of age after graduating from the US high school . To complete the process, they graduate from Community College within 6 years and either complete a four-year degree for at least two years, or work for at least two years in the US Army. During the 6 year period these individuals will be covered by all state state intra-state tuition fees.
In 2001, foreign minor development, relief and education (DREAM) law was introduced to Congress to provide citizenship to undocumented students (DREAM Act, 2001). In order to comply with "dream", immigrants lived in the United States before 16 years of age and graduated from the American high school. There are several other requirements (National Immigration Law Center, 2007). "Dream" has been discussed many times in Congress, but it was not possible to pass through the House of Representatives or the Senate (US Immigration Commission, 2011). Because of the difficulty of passing this bill, the "dream law" has gradually diminished in the political discourse of the country, recently hidden by the implementation of DACA.