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handle is hein.congrec/dreamact0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 




O       CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE                               Keith Hall, Director
        U.S. Congress
        Washington, DC 20515



                                     May 30, 2019



       Honorable Jerrold Nadler
       Chairman
       Committee on the Judiciary
       U.S. House of Representatives
       Washington, DC 20515

       Re: H.R. 2820, the Dream Act of 2019

       Dear Mr. Chairman:

       The Congressional Budget Office and staff of the Joint Committee on
       Taxation (JCT) have completed an estimate of the direct spending and
       revenue effects of H.R. 2820, the Dream Act of 2019, as ordered reported
       by the House Committee on the Judiciary on May 22, 2019. On net, CBO
       and JCT estimate enacting the legislation would increase budget deficits by
       $26.3 billion over the 2020-2029 period; on-budget deficits would increase
       by $31.0 billion, and off-budget deficits would decrease by $4.8 billion
       over that period. Because enacting the bill would affect direct spending and
       revenues, pay-as-you-go procedures apply. 1 The pay-as-you-go effects are
       equal to the change in on-budget deficits (see Table 1).

       H.R. 2820 would allow inadmissible or deportable aliens who arrived in the
       United States before the age of 18 and have been continuously present for
       at least four years to receive lawful permanent resident (LPR) status under
       certain conditions. If they meet further qualifications-related to education,
       employment, uniformed service, disability, caregiving, or hardship to
       themselves or their relatives-the bill would permit them to remove the
       conditional basis of their LPR status, making them eligible to become
       citizens.




       1. A relatively small number of people would be eligible for LPR status under both H.R. 2820
           (the Dream Act) and H.R. 2821 (the American Promise Act), both of which were ordered
           reported by the House Committee on the Judiciary on May 22, 2019. Consequently, if the
           provisions of the two bills were enacted as a single bill, the budgetary effects for that
           combined bill would be smaller than the sum of the budgetary effects of the two bills. CBO
           has not estimated the budgetary effects of a combined bill.

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