HJ0069HAM001LRB103 40356 MST 73136 a

1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION 69

2    AMENDMENT NO. ___. Amend House Joint Resolution 69 by
3deleting everything after the heading and replacing it with
4the following:
 
5    "WHEREAS, Under the federal Immigration and Nationality
6Act, 8 USC §1182(d)(5), the federal government has the
7discretionary authority to grant parole, permission to
8temporarily remain in the United States and apply for
9employment authorization, to any noncitizen "on a case-by-case
10basis for urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public
11benefit," and the US Supreme Court has recognized this
12authority as recently as its 2022 decision in Biden v. Texas,
13597 U.S. __, 142 S. Ct. 2528; and
 
14    WHEREAS, The U.S. government has exercised its parole
15authority in a wide variety of ways for humanitarian reasons
16and significant public benefit; and
 

 

 

HJ0069HAM001- 2 -LRB103 40356 MST 73136 a

1    WHEREAS, A program known as Military Parole in Place
2already exists for spouses, parents, or children, who are
3undocumented, of active-duty or former active duty members of
4the U.S. Armed Forces and the Selected Reserve of the Ready
5Reserve; and
 
6    WHEREAS, President Biden has utilized parole more than any
7other U.S. president in history, extending the program to more
8than 1 million people over the past three years; and
 
9    WHEREAS, Illinois is home to 1.8 million immigrants,
10comprising 14% of the State's population, the great majority
11of whom are naturalized citizens or legal permanent residents,
12according to the Illinois Immigrant Impact Task Force Report;
13and
 
14    WHEREAS, Immigration is critical to maintaining Illinois
15populations levels, compensating for declines in the
16native-born population; and
 
17    WHEREAS, Immigrants play a key role in the State of
18Illinois through cultural, economic, and social contributions,
19and the dignity and humanity of our immigrant communities
20transcend their substantial role in the labor force; and
 

 

 

HJ0069HAM001- 3 -LRB103 40356 MST 73136 a

1    WHEREAS, The U.S. is experiencing an unprecedented labor
2shortage across multiple sectors of our economy that are vital
3to our national well-being; and
 
4    WHEREAS, In the State of Illinois, the fifth largest
5economy in the United States, critical industries, such as
6manufacturing, transportation, warehousing, agriculture,
7healthcare, childcare, senior/home care, hospitality,
8construction, and education, are experiencing a prolonged
9staffing shortage that is harming their growth and
10competitiveness; and
 
11    WHEREAS, According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, as
12analyzed by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Illinois has, on
13average, 76 available workers for every 100 jobs; and
 
14    WHEREAS, The Illinois Department of Employment Security
15(IDES) reports that the largest number of high-demand,
16high-wage job openings through 2030 are in occupations that
17require short-term or moderate-term on-the-job training,
18including over 56,000 annual openings in the restaurant
19sector, over 41,000 annual openings for laborers, assemblers,
20and maintenance workers, over 59,000 annual openings for
21cashiers and retail sales and customer service
22representatives, and over 15,000 annual openings in home
23health and personal care aides; and
 

 

 

HJ0069HAM001- 4 -LRB103 40356 MST 73136 a

1    WHEREAS, The Illinois Farm Bureau has indicated that local
2worker shortages are among the top current challenges for
3Illinois farmers, suppliers, and processors, including
4locating qualified truck drivers to haul grain and sourcing
5enough hands to pick vegetables or manage livestock, and
6furthermore, that this shortage in the agricultural supply
7chains continues to not only undermine the financial health of
8farms in Illinois but, more importantly, threaten food
9security, and, ultimately, our national security; and
 
10    WHEREAS, The Illinois State Board of Education's (ISBE)
112023 Unfilled Positions Report shows that school districts in
12Illinois reported more unfilled positions in FY23 than they
13did in FY22; there continues to be a high demand for
14paraprofessionals and teachers, particularly in the City of
15Chicago, the Northeast region, and the East Central region,
16and the demand for paraprofessionals, who often serve special
17education and bilingual students, outweighs the supply; and
 
18    WHEREAS, The Illinois Nursing Workforce Center reports
19that the State is facing an estimated shortfall of nearly
2015,000 nurses by 2025 and a deficit of 6,200 physicians by
212030, fueled in part by pandemic burnout and by providers
22leaving the profession or retiring, as 52% of the almost
23195,000 RNs in Illinois are over the age of 55 with 27%

 

 

HJ0069HAM001- 5 -LRB103 40356 MST 73136 a

1planning to retire in the next five years and less than 8,000
2nurses graduating each year; and
 
3    WHEREAS, The Migration Policy Institute estimates that
4there are more than 12,000 Illinois residents with
5international healthcare degrees who are prohibited from
6providing care due to licensing or worker authorization; and
 
7    WHEREAS, The Service Employees International Union (SEIU)
8reports that many seniors in the Illinois Community Cares
9Program (CCP) are already going without the care they should
10receive due to a severe workforce shortage, and the number of
11authorized CCP hours not serviced has increased by 46%; much
12of the increased need for home care is associated with the
13increasing number of senior Illinoisans, a strong preference
14for in-home rather than nursing facility services, and a
15strong preference for culturally competent care; IDES projects
16that Illinois will need an additional 9,000 home care workers
17annually for each of the next ten years; and
 
18    WHEREAS, In the education sector alone, Illinois school
19districts report a high number of unfilled teaching and
20paraprofessional positions; and
 
21    WHEREAS, Teachers and paraprofessionals are essential for
22primary and secondary school students in our State,

 

 

HJ0069HAM001- 6 -LRB103 40356 MST 73136 a

1particularly for special education and bilingual students; and
 
2    WHEREAS, The existing worker shortage is so great that
3many school districts have been forced to contract workers
4directly from abroad, even though long-term immigrants are
5well-suited to fill these positions; and
 
6    WHEREAS, Despite the State's critical need for labor,
7nearly half a million Illinoisans who are undocumented are
8still unable to legally work; and
 
9    WHEREAS, Nearly 30% of Illinoisans who are undocumented
10have been residing and contributing to the workforce in the
11U.S. for over 20 years; and
 
12    WHEREAS, The majority of residents in Illinois who are
13undocumented reside in mixed status families with U.S. citizen
14and lawful permanent resident family members; and
 
15    WHEREAS, Long-term immigrant workers in Illinois who are
16undocumented empower key sectors of the economy, including
17manufacturing, farming, food production, senior/home care,
18child care, healthcare, education, construction, hospitality,
19and warehousing, contributing to our State's prosperity and
20also contributing approximately $1.5 billion in taxes per
21year; and
 

 

 

HJ0069HAM001- 7 -LRB103 40356 MST 73136 a

1    WHEREAS, Granting work permits will provide a significant
2public benefit to Illinois' economy by expanding the formal
3workforce to include all who have the eligibility to work,
4while increasing taxes paid to the State; and
 
5    WHEREAS, The exclusion from federal benefits leaves
6long-term immigrant workers who are undocumented and their
7families vulnerable and forces the State of Illinois to spend
8our tax dollars to provide critical health care and other
9benefits; and
 
10    WHEREAS, Illinois provides limited benefits and resources
11for individuals who are undocumented, including limited
12healthcare coverage for low-income qualifying immigrants, much
13of which would be unnecessary if the undocumented had work
14permits and could secure such benefits through their
15employment; and
 
16    WHEREAS, Granting work permits would allow workers to earn
17a fair wage and secure benefits, including health insurance;
18and
 
19    WHEREAS, Granting work permits would aid in the
20enforcement of existing labor laws, thereby reducing the
21exploitation of our lowest wage workers, the majority of whom

 

 

HJ0069HAM001- 8 -LRB103 40356 MST 73136 a

1are workers of color and immigrants; and
 
2    WHEREAS, Work permits would enable tens of thousands of
3students in Illinois who are undocumented and without the
4protection of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) to
5support themselves and their families, fund their continued
6education, and contribute to the State and national economies;
7and
 
8    WHEREAS, Despite the protections Illinois has enacted to
9protect long-term immigrant workers who are undocumented, they
10continue to be at risk of deportation, family separation,
11exploitation at work, and exclusion from health care and other
12benefits due to their immigration status, all of which
13negatively affects Illinois' economy and public safety and the
14quality-of-life in our communities; and
 
15    WHEREAS, For all of these reasons, work permits for
16long-term immigrant workers would be a significant public
17benefit to the State of Illinois; and
 
18    WHEREAS, Only the federal government can issue work
19permits to people who are undocumented under its parole
20authority; and
 
21    WHEREAS, Undocumented immigrants in Illinois and

 

 

HJ0069HAM001- 9 -LRB103 40356 MST 73136 a

1throughout the United States ultimately need permanent
2solutions, such as updating the federal registry program and
3other broad legalization legislation, that would enable them
4to gain permanent lawful status and more fully live with
5dignity and participate in the economic, civic, and social
6life of our nation; and
 
7    WHEREAS, The U.S. Congress and the White House must act
8urgently to pass such permanent solutions; and
 
9    WHEREAS, Short of Congressional action, the White House
10and the Department of Homeland Security must use all available
11tools to protect and improve the lives of immigrants as
12members of our community; therefore, be it
 
13    RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE
14HUNDRED THIRD GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, THE
15SENATE CONCURRING HEREIN, that we urge the President of the
16United States to authorize the DHS Secretary to establish a
17program to evaluate parole and work authorization on a
18case-by-case basis for long-term immigrant workers who are
19undocumented and residing in Illinois to address this State's
20critical need for labor and to secure the family life for tens
21of thousands of mixed status families in Illinois and to work
22with DHS and the US Department of Justice to zealously defend
23any such program from potential legal challenges; and be it

 

 

HJ0069HAM001- 10 -LRB103 40356 MST 73136 a

1further
 
2    RESOLVED, That we urge the Governor to work with federal
3partners to urge, by all possible means, the establishment of
4such a parole and work authorization program for the long-term
5immigrant population who are undocumented and residing in
6Illinois; and be it further
 
7    RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be
8delivered to the Office of the President of the United States
9and to all members of the Illinois Congressional Delegation."