New legal resources provide easy-to-follow instructions and background information on the new Obama administration immigration policies.
SEATTLE, Aug. 15, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, as the implementation date for the deferred action for childhood arrivals, announced by President Obama on June 15, 2012, goes into effect, Avvo, Inc., the web's largest expert-only legal and health Q&A forum and directory (http://www.avvo.com), released a set of legal guides that provide greater clarity on the program, application process, and eligibility and requirements. The new guides, available on the immigration topic page, and authored by immigration attorneys who answer consumer legal questions on Avvo.com, include:
-- What is the DREAM Act and Deferred Action?
-- Deferred Action Eligibility & Requirements
-- Everything You Need to Know to Apply for Deferred Action
-- FAQ: Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA)
Since the policy was announced two months ago, Avvo has received hundreds of questions related to the DREAM Act regarding the application process, eligibility, and how the application process will impact family members who are not eligible for the deferment. Further, Avvo has seen an 86 percent increase in the number of immigration-related questions in the first half of 2012 over the same period last year. Texas leads the country with the greatest number of immigration related questions on Avvo.com, followed by California and New York, taking into account population density.
Chicago resident Nevena Georgieva emigrated to the U.S. from Bulgaria nine years ago. She arrived on a green card, and was granted American citizenship five years later. Georgieva is among the millions of people who have received answers to immigration-related questions on Avvo. "Avvo is an indispensable resource," said Georgieva. "I have turned to Avvo for help with my immigration questions, and I've used it to get advice regarding my business and for other legal concerns. Not only do I get answers within a couple of hours of asking a question, but I have also benefitted from the thousands of other legal answers and useful resources on the site."
According to the Pew Hispanic Center[1], up to 1.4 million children and young adults who are in the United States illegally could benefit from the new deportation policy. The 1.4 million estimate includes 700,000 unauthorized immigrants who are ages 18 to 30 but arrived in the U.S as children and are currently enrolled in school or have graduated from high school; and an additional 700,000 who are under the age of 18 and are enrolled in school.
About Avvo, Inc.
Avvo provides trusted answers to consumer legal and health questions every 10 seconds. In Avvo's Q&A forum with more than 125,000 participating lawyers, doctors and dentists consumers can ask a lawyer or ask a medical professional questions for free. Avvo's professional directory provides comprehensive profiles, patient and client reviews, peer endorsements and the industry-recognized Avvo Rating for more than 90 percent of doctors, dentists and lawyers in the U.S. Avvo launched in 2007 and is privately held with funding from Benchmark Capital, DAG Ventures and Ignition Partners.
[1] Pew Hispanic Center, Up to 1.4 Million Unauthorized Immigrants Could Benefit from New Deportation Policy, June 15, 2012