What is Opportunity for All?
The Opportunity for All campaign (also known as O4A or Assembly Bill 713) is spearheaded by the undocumented student-led network, with support from the UCLA Labor Center, and the UCLA School of Law Center of Immigration Law and Policy. The campaign proposes a legal theory that directly challenges the interpretation of the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA), which notoriously banned undocumented migrants from their right to work. The legal theory, which has been researched and supported by legal scholars from Berkeley School of Law, New York University School of Law, Cornell, Stanford and Yale, argues that the current legal interpretation is incorrect, and that states have the legal authority to hire undocumented students because there is nothing in IRCA that explicitly bans states from doing so. States also have the autonomy to make decisions on employment, which only strengthens that undocumented migrants have every right to work, and be compensated fairly for it.
The campaign is fighting for the right of undocumented students to be considered for campus jobs, and careers, regardless of βwork authorization.β Opportunity for All took form in late 2022 with the original intention of being implemented at the University of California campuses, with hopes that this would set a precedent for other state schools such as California, State Universities, and California Community Colleges, then eventually all across the nation. Currently, Opportunity for All is being proposed at the California state level, if passed it will be applicable to all state schools, granting undocumented students across state colleges the right to be considered for jobs that will help ease some of the financial burdens that come with being an undocumented student.