23.08.28 Joint Letter From Johnson and Pritzker
23.08.28 Joint Letter From Johnson and Pritzker
23.08.28 Joint Letter From Johnson and Pritzker
Since the arrival of the first “Operation Texas” bus in August of 2022, the State of Illinois and the
City of Chicago have spent and obligated over $250 million to help welcome and support the more
than 13,000 asylum seekers who have traveled to Chicago from the US-Mexico border. As we
continue to receive new arrivals who often lack sponsors, shelter, and have no immediate legal
pathways to work, we have come to understand that this is not a short-term crisis, but rather a long-
term reality.
As a result, our focus as city, state, and federal systems must pivot away from emergency responses
that have already reached unsustainable levels towards policies that will enable individuals to live
with dignity. We must build a system that can safely and capably receive the growing number of new
arrivals who seek shelter in our city and state; there is no path to success without significant new
federal financial support and immigration policy changes.
Today, we write to you to respectfully request that the Department of Homeland Security leverage
its authority to grant parole through the “Significant Public Benefit” designation to create a process
for streamlined work authorization in which states could sponsor non-citizens to work in industries
facing labor shortages.
As the asylum seekers we serve have begun to build lives for themselves and their families in Illinois,
we have witnessed the dangerous work conditions and exploitation that often result when individuals
lack access to legal work and the protections that come with it. All workers in Illinois deserve to feel
safe at work. The precarious legal status of non-citizen workers exposes them to a higher risk of
mistreatment, especially when employers wield the power to determine the legal presence of an
employee. It is our strong recommendation that in the development of this program, worker safety
and worker choice is prioritized, and a worker’s legal presence is not solely tied to their employment
by a single employer.
We understand that unlike standard asylum applications, various other parole programs, such as the
Afghan National and Cuban, Haitian, Nicaraguan, and Venezuelan programs offer significantly
shorter pathways to work authorization and have allowed many migrants to quickly achieve self-
sufficiency while contributing to critical industries that help our city and state supply chains, service
industries, and care infrastructure thrive.
Our national immigration system continues to be stretched to receive and dutifully serve
unprecedented numbers of individuals. We must acknowledge that in the absence of long-awaited
comprehensive reform from Congress, we need to consider other significant actions that allow us to
tap into the incredible value immigrants bring to our workforce and communities. DHS has the
authority to expand the “Significant Public Benefit” parole designation into a process that would
allow states like Illinois to opt into a lawful, orderly, efficient parole process that would address
critical workforce needs. On behalf of our new residents and the municipalities and communities that
are struggling to welcome them, we urge you to use this authority to everyone’s shared benefit.
Thank you for your consideration of this joint proposal. We offer our support in continuing to
innovate to move towards an immigration system that better reflects the welcoming values our
administrations share.
Sincerely, Sincerely,