While he knew the significance of the protection he received under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, he had one problem: he didn't have the money to pay the USD 495 registration fee required to renew his participation in the program for two more years.
Park worked as a private tutor, and money was tight in the late spring and summer months when school was out. He figured he could re-enrol at the end of the year -- the rules of the program allowed people to renew lapsed registrations as long as a full year hadn't passed.
But those like Park, whose registration had lapsed, were barred from renewing.
"I had planned to (renew) it but Trump did not give me enough notice," Park said at a news conference yesterday.
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"This is completely unfair," Sandoval-Moshenberg said. "The government has to give people fair notice that they're going to change the rules."
Steve Blando, a spokesman for US Citizenship and Immigration Services, which administers the DACA program, declined to comment on the lawsuit, but confirmed the estimate that about 50,000 of the 800,000 who had ever registered for DACA had failed to renew their status by the time the Trump administration announced plans to phase out the program.
They can earn money legally, possibly develop skills that would allow them to stay on a work visa, or maybe find another way to stay, possibly through marriage.
Park, who came to the US from South Korea when he was 9, said northern Virginia is the only place he knows at this point. He admitted that he was scared that filing a lawsuit and speaking out at a press conference might put a target on his back for immigration enforcement, but said he felt compelled to speak up.
Congress has been considering legislation that would put DACA protections in federal law, but Park said he's worried that the pace of progress is too slow.
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