Childhood Arrivals Program or what is called daca was announce pd by president obama in 2012. Hundreds of thousands of young people brought to this country as children were at risk of being deported. They didnt take the action to come. Their parents took the action to come and bring them. President obamas executive order temporarily protected these undocumented young people from deportation. Daca also provides the opportunity to obtain work permits that has made it possible for many young daca beneficiaries to enroll in college. If congress doesnt act now and pass a law, President Trumps decision to terminate this program will have devastating consequences for the nearly 800,000 families across the United States, particularly those in california. This decision to end daca without first ensuring that young people have Legal Protection is why we are demanding a vote on the dream act as soon as possible. Daca recipients certainly deserve now, not six months from now. These young people tr
san ramon to san felipe survived it. it s bittersweet. we re all so happy that, you know, there are, you know, the 20 that are coming home. but you know, it would be nice to see him pull up. mandy lee hahy says no one knows more about the boat than he does. it keeps us moving forward. in our mind we just constant lip say, they re together. they re taking care of one another. now, the family members are actually inside the house right now. they ve just told us that any minute now they expect to be included in a conference call with the u.s. coast guard updating them on the search. we ll find out shortly afterwards exactly where they are in this process. live in san ramon, tracy grant, bay area news. thank you. new details tonight in a deadly shooting on a b.a.r.t. train plat fourm. the identity of a man shot and killed in san francisco. the city s medical examiner identified the victim as charles hill. we first reported b.a.r.t. officers opening fire on the 45-year
they are undercover agents with the bureau of narcotic enforcement working under the state department of justice, but now the agency is in trouble. it s going to make it that much easier for these organized criminals to do their dirty work here. reporter: bob cook is special agent in charge of the san jose office. he fears the approved budget will soon force the bureau to shut its doors and he worries about the message that sends to the cartels. they won t have to be on the lookout. no one is coming, you know. we won t be there, and local law enforcement is stretched real thin. reporter: layoffs also worry santa clara s police chief who relies on buro s help. even with the task forces it s an uphill battle. the meth explosion and all the proliferation of other drugs. those guys have their hands full, as it is. reporter: eric hernandez worries what it might mean for his san jose neighborhood where he says drug dealers are known to operate around schools and youth c