Who will volunteer to be deported?
Comment to USCIS about the Alien Registration Rule
The Trump administration published an interim final rule to bring back a provision of U.S. immigration law that has not being used for decades It requires immigrants who did not enter with a visa to register with the federal government and carry proof of their registration, or face criminal penalties. Here is the public comment I submitted to US Citizenship and Immigration Services on April 8, 2025.
I oppose this Alien Registration Rule. I live in Central Oregon in a community that thrives on tourism and hospitality. Many Latino immigrants work in our restaurants and hotels and run their own small businesses. Their labor is woven into our local economy.
I know a few immigrants who lack legal status and others who live in families where members have different statuses. These families live, work, and shop here. They send their children, who are often citizens, to public schools. They pay the same taxes as citizens. Many attend local churches. They are not criminals.
If you offered those undocumented residents a chance to legalize their status, they would line up and pay any fees for the process. The last time the US offered this opportunity was in 1987-1988. Instead, this administration is demanding that undocumented immigrants submit their names and locations so they can be deported.
Our economy lost workers during the pandemic and businesses are desperate to find labor. Most immigrants are employed in service jobs that don’t appeal to citizen job-seekers. Any actions to deport our immigrant workforce would pull the rug out from under our local economies. If we deport agricultural and food processing workers, less food will reach our markets and the prices will rise. If we deport construction workers, new apartments and business and public structures won’t get built.
There are no aliens here to register, only neighbors who want to belong. I urge you to withdraw this misguided Alien Registration Rule.