https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/ne...hip/ar-BBUGwkd
House Democrats
 introduced a bill  Tuesday to provide a path to citizenship for young undocumented  immigrants under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, and  people with other types of temporary immigration protections.
   
 Although the H.R. 6 bill, also known as the Dream and Promise Act,  was introduced by California Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard, the  legislation's co-authors include Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and  Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., as well as New York Reps. Nydia M.  Velázquez and Yvette D. Clarke, among other lead bill sponsors.
The  announcement has given hope to people like Ana Argueta, 55, who has  been living and working in the United States as a cleaning custodian for  a decade under the federal program known as Temporary Protected Status,  or TPS.
TPS  is granted to countries ravaged by natural disasters or war and allows  citizens of those countries to remain in the U.S. until the situation  improves back home. In the past decades, previous administrations from  both parties have renewed recipients' TPS status, but 
the Trump administration has said it would be ending TPS for a majority of recipients.
Though courts have temporarily blocked the  Trump administration from ending TPS, families hope the Democrats'  legislation, if passed, could give them a permanent solution once and  for all.
"I think this is good," Argueta told NBC News in Spanish. "Now, we have to trust that, yes, it will go through."
Argueta, born in El Salvador, is one of approximately
 325,000 people  in the U.S. who have TPS status and could eventually become U.S.  citizens if the new legislation is eventually passed. Salvadorans were  eligible for TPS status in 2001 after an earthquake devastated the  country.
The bill also provides a citizenship pathway to thousands of Liberians who have been granted 
Deferred Enforced Departure, known as DED, which is not considered an immigration status but shields a designated population from deportation.
"I  ask lawmakers to please keep us in their conscience, and that they give  us immigration reform. It is time. We deserve it. We've been  contributing for a long time and we've been paying our taxes like  everybody else," Argueta, who is also a member of the 
32BJ SEIU workers union, said.
Pelosi spoke 
during a press conference announcing the new legislation.
"We look forward to a strong bipartisan vote to pass this bill," she said.
If  passed, the bill will also bring protections to people like Jessica  Garcia, who is one of about 800,000 Dreamers who have DACA status, which  allows young undocumented immigrants like her who were brought to the  U.S. as children to work and study without fear of deportation.
"This is bill is not about dreams, but about realities," said García, 21, who is also a member of 
CHIRLA,  an advocacy group that works to defend the human and civil rights of  immigrants and refugees. "I'm asking Congress to pass a permanent  solution that would permanently protect people like me."
According  to Roybal-Allard, the bill would provide lawful permanent status to  immigrants who were brought to the U.S. at age 17 or younger who are  employed, in higher education or in the military. It would also give  those who already are DACA recipients access to in-state college  tuition, federal student aid and a pathway to citizenship. 
"My  experience as a young person of diverse background makes me a strong,  passionate and determined U.S. citizen in waiting," said García, who  considers herself "as American as 'The Star-Spangled Banner,' but with a  proud Oaxacan heritage."
Veláquez agreed.
"She  is an American in every sense but on paper, and today is the day that  we're going to start reversing that," Velázquez said about García.
Amid  a round of applause, Hoyer closed out the press conference saying that  "as the majority leader, I am here to pledge that this bill is going to  be on the floor."
People who entered the US Legally, and have built lives as law-abiding citizens who contribute and pay taxes, who have assimilated into America - deserve a chance to earn citizenship.  Not an automatic award - but a pathway to earn citizenship in the US.
I am For IT!