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Pandemic puts DACA recipients on front lines

Veronica Velasquez’s job as a physical therapist at a Los Angeles community hospital has become riskier as the number of coronavirus patients rises. But the risk of losing her working papers and being deported hasn’t changed at all.

Velasquez, 27, is among the nearly 700,000 young people brought illegally to the United States as children who rely on the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, that President Donald Trump wants to terminate. A Supreme Court ruling could come any day.

Her plight, along with those of an estimated 27,000 DACA recipients working as doctors, nurses, paramedics and other health care workers, is full of irony. At a time when her adopted country needs her most, she could be pulled from the workforce.

“I am treating people suspected of having COVID-19, and all I’m asking is to stay in this country and provide that care,” Velasquez says. “We’re definitely helping them stay alive.”

Veronica Velasquez is a DACA recipient working as a physical therapist at a Los Angeles community hospital.

As the Supreme Court considers their fate, USA TODAY spoke with DACA recipients working in the health care field in California, Florida, Texas and in the suburbs of New York City, where the coronavirus has hit hardest. Some face a shortage of personal protective equipment, often wearing the same masks for an entire hospital shift. Others are well supplied but nervous nonetheless.

Showdown:As Supreme Court takes up Trump plan to end DACA, American dreams at stake for nearly 700,000 immigrants

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