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in support of the DREAM Act. <br />Carol Van Houten, 768 west 10 Avenue, Community Alliance of Lane County (CALL), urged the council to <br />adopt the resolution in support of the DREAM Act. She said CALL favored comprehensive immigration reform <br />and the DREAM Act was a step in this direction. She related that they saw that this was a way for a very talented <br />group of people to come out of the shadows and contribute to their community and their nation. <br />Kimberly Gladen, 361 west Broadway, provided information from Project De Novo, a successful pre -trial <br />diversion program in Minnesota. Her mother worked for the project, which was how the Hennepin County area <br />dealt with property crimes. She said people were required to pay restitution and their records were closed after <br />completion of the program, which addressed first -time offenders by providing counseling and alcohol and drug <br />treatment. She stated that the perpetrators had to take responsibility for their lives through this approach. Her <br />mother thought it would be inexpensive to start such a program as they could do so with a director, a case worker, <br />and two counselors. She thought the latter could be interns from the University. She said if the "movers and <br />shakers" from the City and the University put their heads together she was sure they could work out a program that <br />would aid the City with its property crime problem. She pointed out that such a program would save court money <br />and jail space, while helping people get back on the road to productive lives. She noted the project was a non- <br />profit agency and that it had been so successful that drug and juvenile divisions had been added to the program. <br />Jane Waite, 30415 Le Bleu Road, said hundreds of kids in Lane County would be helped by the DREAM Act. <br />She was the Equity and Diversity Specialist for Lane Educational Service District (Lane ESD) and she ran into <br />many young people in the situation that the act was meant to help. She urged the council to vote in support of <br />those children. She also wished to speak as an indigenous person and asked that they imagine there were no <br />borders. <br />Guadalupe Quinn, 3 820 Greenwood Street, wanted to add her voice in support of the DREAM Act. She said she <br />coordinated the Immigrant Rights Advocacy Program for Amigos Multicultural Services Center. She hoped the <br />City of Eugene could join the long list of cities that support the DREAM Act, and then immigrant youth could <br />continue their educations. She asked the council to ' look out on the room full of people and to understand that in it <br />was the future of the community. She asked the council to think about what it would mean to the community to <br />have young people who were well- prepared to continue running the City. <br />Jairo Castaneda, 1722 Hilyard Street, was present in support of the DREAM Act resolution. He said he was there <br />as a student, a member of Impact, a student body senator, a board member of Oregon Students of Color Coalition, <br />and as a MEChA recruitment and retention director. He had come to the United States as a non - documented <br />individual, at a very young age. He said through many hardships, trials and tribulations, privilege, and hard work <br />he had been able to gain citizenship. He was currently a student studying psychology and ethnic studies. He <br />related that he had been privileged to attend higher education, but over 65,000 young people would not be able to <br />do so. He announced that through MEChA and with the help of a lot of individuals, they were hosting the annual <br />Rata. Unida Youth Conference on March 10 at the University of Oregon, which sought to bring over 300 <br />Latino/Latina students from all over the area so they could see what higher education looked like and so they could <br />feel they had the opportunity to pursue it. He urged the council to pass the resolution in support of the DREAM <br />Act. <br />Ronald Burley, 1670 Leatherwood Street, Vice Chair of the Human Rights Commission (HRC), stated that the <br />HRC had voted on February 16 to endorse the proposed City Council resolution on the DREAM Act. He said in <br />supporting the act the City would join other cities. He stated that the DREAM Act proposed to allow <br />undocumented students who had lived in the United States for at least five years and who had graduated from high <br />school or received a graduate equivalency diploma to legalize their immigration status so they could qualify for <br />federal financial aid and so students would be considered to be state residents in order to get in -state tuition. He <br />felt the adoption of the proposal was a way to think globally and act locally. <br />MINUTES Eugene City Council March 8, 2010 Page 3 <br />Regular Meeting <br />