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IMMIGRANTS’ CONCERNS 14
Stay Home/ continued from page 1 of CDC's Division of Global Migration and Quarantine. Cetron states that Title 42 was not proposed by himself or anyone on his team but was "handed" to them by someone in Trump's administration.
In March 2020, the CDC issued the order for Title 42 of the Public Health Services Act, forcing specific individuals seeking asylum protections at the USMexico borders to be deported and wait in Mexico. The reason was that it was "necessary to protect the public health from an increase in the serious danger of the introduction of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)."
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CDC experts disagreed that the ruling had a strong enough public health foundation. Experts said there was no evidence the motion would slow the coronavirus. The move triggered close to 150,000 children and adults to be expelled from the country.
"We gathered data on the reported incidents of the disease in these populations. We scoured available international data. My team that works physically on the border, including the U.S.-Mexico unit and others with a lot of experience, we could not substantiate that the threat was, quote/unquote, being addressed by this," said Cetron.
Despite all this, Biden and his administration continue to whitewash Title 42 and use it as an excuse to block asylum seekers from entering the country. The same policy that this administration promised to end.
During a briefing on January 5, Biden stated, "Under the United States Supreme Court decision, a case on Title 42 later this year, my administration will — and they will make a decision, finally, what to do about Title 42. In the meantime, my administration will continue to use that authority as the Supreme Court has required."
The administration says those seeking asylum should follow the CB1 app application process. They must wait before coming to the United States, forcing those who want to leave their country for many reasons to remain there, putting their lives at risk. The administration threatens that migrants will not be allowed entry if they attempt to cross the border while waiting.
"If [migrants] attempt to cross into the
United States unlawfully, they will be returned to Mexico and will not be eligible for this program after that."
DACA Under Threat
Additionally, to lessen the possibility of DACA recipients or past recipients of DACA being deported, the Biden Administration should rework its discretionary enforcement agenda, policies, and objectives.
There are currently 590,000 DACA holders as of September 2022, down 700,000 in May 2018.
The decline is the result of some DACA recipients changing their status through marriage to a citizen of the United States or acquiring a visa; other recipients may have lost their status due to criminal activity; still, others may not have had time to reapply. Some may have also passed away, and others may have fled the nation.
According to current estimates, 1.2 million immigrants would be eligible for DACA. Mexican immigrants have applied to the program at far higher rates than Asian immigrants, particularly South Korean immigrants, who have used it at significantly lower rates.
Judge Hannon might reject DACA, as many commentators have predicted. The program might expire during the following two years if there is no congressional action.
The Biden administration must file an appeal if that occurs.
The most crucial aspect of this situation would be that these migrants or immigrants could gradually lose their status. As a result, the economic and social advantages they have attained would fade, and men and many or even some of them might consider returning to their country of origin, specifically Mexico.

Per-country Caps

Moreover, Congress must create an equal per-country cap, as many skilled workers need help with the backlog. A CATO institute study shows that if they could remain in the queue forever, skilled migrant workers from India would delay the backlog for up to 90 years and 44 years for Chinese migrants.
Therefore, the Equal Access to Green Cards for Legal Employment (EAGLE) Act of 2021 (H.R. 3648) is vital. The bill eliminates the per-country cap on continued on page 15