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Lessons of 1986 amnesty

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“We were really desperate,” Zajaczkowska said. “We had our little suitcases packed up just in case.”

Along with thousands of other people that winter, the Polish couple waited in long lines in the Chicago cold to hand in their applications and proof of residency. At first, they were denied. But they tried again and became U.S. citizens in the mid-1990s.

They still remember how hard it was to be without documentation.

“Living like that is horrifying,” said Zajaczkowska, who now oversees the immigrant services program for the Polish American Association in Chicago’s Portage Park neighborhood. “I really understand how the people who are facing that today feel.”

There are no hard details yet on what a new legalization program would look like, but Meissner said a key question will be whether the application process will be limited to a specific time frame.

The 1986 law allowed eligible applicants a year to apply, which led to confusion and a sense of urgency toward the end of that period inside the four intake centers set up in Chicago to help process applications.

The United Neighborhood Organization, at the time run by Alderman Danny Solis, 25th, orchestrated a citywide effort to get Latino immigrants in the city to apply.

Phil Mullins, a co-founder of UNO, recalled walking into federal immigration offices in Chicago and seeing stacks of unprocessed applications that towered over his head.

“They weren’t equipped to handle it. It was literally paper going up to the ceilings,” Mullins said. “And, if they couldn’t find a file, it was ridiculous. So, we ended up volunteering” to help process applications.

The confusion inside the “horrifically crowded” centers — run by federal contractors inside malls, warehouses and other large buildings — led to many cases of people being turned away, only to later find they were eligible, said Carlina Tapia-Ruano, another immigration attorney in Chicago.

Many of those people later became plaintiffs in federal class-action lawsuits filed against the U.S. government that became expensive and dragged on through the late 1990s.

Staff members at the centers “were as misinformed and confused and outright wrong about the law as anyone else, and they would turn people away,” Tapia-Ruano said.

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