Why driver's licenses are a huge deal for California's undocumented immigrants
Undocumented immigrants in California will be able to apply for driver’s licenses starting Jan. 2 — and the impact could be life-changing.
A driver’s license is worth a lot (as any teenager will tell you). But it’s even more meaningful for an immigrant who entered the country illegally or overstayed a visa.
Here’s how driver’s licenses will transform lives in California, with guidance from the National Immigration Law Center:
1. Access to jobs, housing and education
California is a huge state (the third biggest by land area, behind Alaska and Texas) and a car can be a gateway to finding the best job, school or place to live. The state is also home to the biggest population of undocumented immigrants — an estimated 2.5 million people, according to the Pew Research Center.
When you consider the numbers, a driver’s license suddenly looks like an enormous policy change.
In nearby Oregon, where a similar law failed to win approval in November, a study found that migrants depended on cars for access to the labor market, as well as things like medical care, church attendance and recreation.
2. Protection from deportation
The Obama administration has pledged to focus on deporting serious criminals, but immigration officials still remove people for traffic infractions. In the 2014 fiscal year, one in four so-called “criminal alien removals” were for low-level crimes, including unlicensed driving.