Should Illegal Immigrants Be Legalized

Words: 1333
Pages: 6

Andrew Lama.
Ms. Revenaugh
English 9, 6th period
17 December 2015 Illegal Immigrants And Why They Should Be Legalized
What does it mean to be an illegal immigrant? An illegal immigrant is a person who enters the country illegally or entered legally on a visa for work or school and stayed in the country after their visa expired. In the United States, many illegal immigrants come to the United States from Mexico or Central American. Throughout the years, the U.S. has built more and more fences and has posted extra police along the Mexico border. The U.S. catches tens of thousands of people trying to cross the border each year, but many cross over to the United States successfully. In Addition, illegal immigration has been a growing problem
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Alana Semuels, the staff writer at The Atlantic, writes an article called “Business Owners Getting Vocal on immigration”, the article is about how business owners want to ensure that workers continue coming into the U.S. to fill jobs they say Americans don’t want. Illegal immigrants take jobs that the American workers do not want (Samuels). Hotels, restaurants, and farms want a year-around laborer to fill the jobs that many do not want. Much less, Tom Baxter, the columnist at the Saporta Report, has written about politics and the South for more than 40 years. Wrote an article about a farmer who hired 25 workers and the day Alabama’s immigration law to place only five workers showed up due to the law. U.S. employers need more legalized workers (Baxter). About half of the agricultural workers, 17% of construction workers, and 12% of food preparation workers nationwide are illegal immigrants. Additionally, Jens Manuel Krogstad is a writer/editor focusing on Hispanics, immigration and demographics at Pew Research Center. Illegal immigrants make up about 5.1% of the United States workforces (Krogstad). In the United States, there are about 8.1 million illegal immigrants working or looking for work in 2012. In the states of Nevada which were 10%, California with 9%, Texas also with 9% and New Jersey with 8%, those states had the highest amount of illegal immigrants in their labor …show more content…
According to Nina Liss-Schultz, a Southern California native, wrote, “Reductions in Hospital Payments Could Undermine Health Care For Undocumented Immigrants”, which is about how more and more hospitals are not treating illegal immigrants. If the families become citizens then it will help the families access health care (Schultz). There are about 25% of families where one or more parent is an illegal immigrant that is uninsured, but illegal immigrants do not get coverage under the Affordable Care Act. In addition, in the article called, “Shattered Families” talks about how illegal immigrants have children while in the United States so the there child is a U.S. citizen, and later the parent gets deported and the child ends up in foster care. Allowing illegal immigrants gain legal status would keep their families together (Shattered Families). There are about 5,100 kids that are in the U.S. foster care system by cause of their parents are illegal immigrants and were deported. Audrey Singer is a senior fellow at the Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program, wrote an article