Lawmakers introduce invoice to assist refugees attend Georgia faculties

In Georgia and across the country, the pace of the post-COVID economic recovery has been slowed by the persistent challenge of labor shortages.

“We currently have more jobs available in Georgia than we have people to fill them. A lot of small business owners are telling me, ‘We need access to more labor,’” Cantrell said. “Alles [refugees] want to do is work. They want to live the American dream.” Easing their access to education could help make that happen.

In a statement, Darlene Lynch, Chair of the Business & Immigration for Georgia (BIG) Partnership, a coalition of Georgia businesses and civic leaders, said she supports HB 932′s passing.

“Georgia businesses across the state are struggling with workforce shortages, and HB 932 is a much-needed tool for building the talent pipeline,” she wrote. “Georgia refugees bring skills and talents to the state from countries around the world. Many of these young people have put their education on hold due to war and conflict, and they’re eager to restart their schooling, build their skills, and get into the workforce to support themselves and their families.”

Although he views the bill, which has yet to be heard in committee, as a “no brainer,” Rep. Cantrell says he has already registered significant pushback. He is not “overconfident” it will pass, in part because of how polarizing discussions on immigration-related issues can be.

“I had a lady come up to me Monday. She looked at my nametag, and then she said, ‘Hey, aren’t you the guy with that bill to give in-state tuition to illegals?’ And I said, ‘No, ma’am, I’m not. My bill doesn’t do anything for illegals.’ So, you know, people don’t want to have an honest dialogue about this issue, and that’s why we can’t get anything done.”

In 2020, Georgia legislators introduced bills that would have extended in-state tuition to recipients of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which protects certain immigrants brought to the US as children from deportation. Those bills were unsuccessful.

Lautaro Grinspan is a Report for America corps member covering metro Atlanta’s immigrant communities.