‘City of Roses’ Volume XLVI • Number 36 Honoring Gladys Waters Gospel Music Showcase Albina Head Start names building for late mentor Highland to host awards show concert s ee l ocal n ews , Page 3 s ee story , Page 7 www.portlandobserver.com Wednesday • September 6, 2017 Established in 1970 Committed to Cultural Diversity A recent rally in favor of immigration reform at the White House in Washington, D.C. brings out Michael Claros, 8, of Silver Spring, Md., whose parents would have been eligible for DAPA, or Deferred Action for Parents of Americans, an Obama era policy memo that the Trump administration has since formally revoked. (AP Photo) Dreamers Abandoned Trump ends program to furious opposition by M ichael l eighton P ortland o bserver e ditor A wide range of civil rights groups condemned the Trump Administration Tuesday for ending the 2012 program that has deferred deportations for more than 780,000 people who came to the U.S. illegally as children. Opposition to the move was furi- ous after Trump officials announced they will rescind the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) pro- gram and phase it out over the next six months, leaving the fate of the so- called Dreamers impacted by the pro- gram in the hands of Congress. The decision could impact 11,000 children in Oregon. “Today, President Trump made one of the cruelest and most racially-mo- tivated decisions in modern American history,” said Derrick Johnson, national interim president of the NAACP. “The current administration has abdicated any moral authority associated with the United States in favor of policies designed to promote white supremacy, shrink our democracy and divide our nation. It’s simply un-American.” David Rogers, executive direc- tor of the American Civil Liberties Union of Oregon, said Trump and the forces that helped to end DACA, “threw the lives and future of Dream- er families into disarray, and injected chaos and uncertainly into thousands of workplaces and communities across America.” Rogers said the DACA program served as a critical lifeline for young immigrants who came to America as children and have known the United States as their only home. He said the Oregon ACLU will continue to fight on behalf of their futures. Ivan Espinoza-Madrigal, executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Economic Justice, said deporting dreamers would send them back to countries which they have little or no connection and sub- ject them in many cases to the intense violence or poverty present in some of those countries.” “This latest Trump threat only fur- ther divides our country and creates fear in our communities,” said Jason Leon, chair of the Latino Caucus of the Democratic Party of Oregon. U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., called Trump’s decision an effort to punish thousands of innocent young Americans c ontinued on P age 6