April 2004
News
and Commentary written and edited by
Boyd
F. Campbell,
Attorney at Law and Civil Law Notary
Published exclusively via the World
Wide Web since 1994
© 2004, Boyd F. Campbell,
All Rights Reserved
In this edition:
Immigration in the News (scroll down)
U.S.
embassy employee charged in visa scheme
Immigrants
blamed for U.S. environmental problems
Can
you prove you are a U.S. citizen? Are your 'papers' in order?
Lawmakers
working on compromise immigration plan
Paying more for worse immigration service
LEAD STORY
USCIS increases petition, application fees across the board
Fees
for immigration-related petitions and applications are increasing across
the board, effective April 30, 2004. Most fees increased by an average
of $55. The shocker was the increase in fees for international adoptions:
the fee for an I-600 (Petition to Classify Orphan as an Immediate Relative),
or I-600A (Application for Advance Processing of Orphan Petition), $460
to $525.
A
list of commonly filed petitions and applications, along with the former
fee and the new fee is set out below:
I-90
(Application to Replace Permanent Resident Alien Card), $130 to $185
I-129
(Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker), $130 to $185
I-129F
(Petition for Alien Fiance(e)), $110 to $165
I-130
(Petition for Alien Relative), $130 to $185
I-131
(Application for Travel Document), $110 to $165
I-140
(Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker), $135 to $190
I-360
(Petition for Amerasian, Widow(er), or Special Immigrant), $130 to $185
I-485
(Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status), $225 to
$315
I-539
(Application to Extend/Change Nonimmigrant Status), $140 to $195
I-751
(Petition to Remove Conditions on Residence), $145 to $200
I-765
(Application for Employment Authorization), $120 to $175
I-824
(Application for Action on an Approved Application or Petition), $140 to
$195
N-400
(Application for Naturalization), $260 to $320
N-600
(Apploication for Certificate of Citizenship), $185 to $240
While many groups and individuals protested the new rule-making by USCIS, the agency took no heed and increased the fees anyway. If you do not like the new fee structure, please write your members of Congress or U.S. senators and demand that Congress make a direct appropriation to USCIS so that these fee increases may be rescinded.
Florida bill to license illegal aliens dies
A bill
backed by Florida Governor Jeb Bush that would have allowed illegal immigrants
to obtain driver's licenses has been abandoned by its sponsor after law
enforcement officials raised security concerns. Republican State
Senator Rudy Garcia said he would propose studying the issue before next
year's legislative session begins.
It
was the latest setback to efforts to grant licenses to illegal immigrants.
Four months ago, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger repealed a law
that would have allowed
about 2 million illegal immigrant drivers there to begin applying for licenses.
He cited domestic security concerns as a reason.
Bush
said on April 17 that he would continue to work with law enforcement to
try to improve the measure before the next legislative session. Sheriffs
questioned whether other countries can provide acceptable criminal background
checks.
Emergency H-2B visa legislation introduced in Congress
The "Save Summer Act of 2004" (S. 2252/ H.R. 4052) has been introduced in both houses of Congress by multiple sponsors of both parties. This bill would increase the H-2B cap for Fiscal Year 2004 by 40,000 visas and would require the Department of Homeland Security to make annual and quarterly reports on the use of the H-2B program. Senators Orrin Hatch and others have also introduced the Summer Operations and Services ("S.O.S") Relief and Reform Act, about which more later.
ICE announces expansion of pilot removal project
On March 26, 2004, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) announced expansion of its "Hartford Pilot Project" to Atlanta and Denver as part of its "Endgame" plan. The project involves the detaining of foreign nationals immediately upon Immigration Judge orders of removal at court hearings. Apparently the Atlanta project will be run much like a similar project in Miami.
DOS issues rule on passports, interviews
An interim final rule issued by the State Department on March 26, 2004, clarifies that revoked, lost, or stolen passports are invalid. The interim final rule requires specified photographs and personal appearance of all applicants not eligible to apply by mail (including minors under 14, unless specifically waived).
CLEAR Act would cost $9 billion over 5 years
National Immigration Law Center
The
Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has completed a cost estimate for the
CLEAR Act. Although CBO did not directly figure state and local government
costs, their analysis includes some mention of these burdens and is helpful
on the federal cost side. While we need to do a more detailed analysis
of their findings, here are some highlights:
The
price tag for the federal government would be $9 billion between 2005 and
2009, if everything authorized is appropriated (such as the $1 billion
annually for SCAAP). In the analysis CBO points out that Congress
fails to appropriate more than 35% of SCAAP requests annually in its current
form, showing how unlikely it is that CLEAR would lead to new resources
for state/local governments and police proportionate to the costs of participating.
Furthermore,
SCAAP reimbursement currently requires conviction for a state or local
crime. Since immigration violations are not part of state or local
legal codes, it raises the question whether any of the new enforcement
could actually be reimbursed for as the bill's drafters envision.
This point was not explored by CBO, and if anyone has greater insight into
how this might work we would like to hear from you.
Regarding
the administrative judgment system established in the bill (to award monies
to local police departments who take undocumented immigrants into custody
and the Department of Homeland Security doesn't come to pick them up),
CBO said local governments won't find this cost-effective and likely won't
pursue the funds, again undercutting the argument that more money is on
the way. In fact, CBO didn't factor any of these potential reimbursements
($1,000 per incident and then $10,000 if there is a pattern and practice
of DHS not picking up undocumented people identified by local police) into
the $9 billion federal price tag, because they deemed it so unlikely local
governments would try to pursue this money.
In
the legislation, both state/local and federal enforcement of immigration
laws would be funded, in part, through a "tax" on visa application fees
paid to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. One-third of these
fees would be re-directed to enforcement. CBO estimates that U.S.
CIS could have to raise an additional $1 billion or more a year to pay
for this "tax," which could require perhaps a doubling of application fees.
This additional money is not coming out of federal tax coffers, and so
may be another hidden cost of the legislation. Fees are already on
the rise as application processing times skyrocket, and forcing immigration
benefits applicants to now foot part of the bill for enforcement is a significant
statement on the drafters' part.
Finally,
CBO said that the bill does contain intergovernmental mandates that preempt
state and local laws, as defined in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act.
H-1B visas exhausted for fiscal year
On
February 17, Citizenship and Immigration Services (CIS) announced that
it has received enough H-1B visa petitions to meet this year's cap of 65,000
visas. CIS will no longer accept H-1B visa petitions for first-time
employment. Current H-1B visaholders who renew their visas or change
employers may still file petitions for those purposes.
Petitions
that do not count toward the cap include those that change employers, change
the job or duty position, extend the period of the alien's employment in
the United States, or allow the H-1B visaholder to work concurrently in
a second H-1B position.
A
new allocation of 65,000 H-1B visas will not be available until October
1, 2004. New petitions, with an employment start date of October
1, 2004, will be accepted beginning on April 1, 2004.
CIS fee increases under fire (see 'Immigration in the News' below)
American Immigration Lawyers Association
Citizenship
and Immigration Services (CIS) of the Department of Homeland Security has
announced proposed increases in fees for immigration applications of up
to 55 percent each. These fees cover almost all of the agency's expenses.
However, at a time when the quality of service is at an historic low, increases
of this magnitude are difficult to justify. Processing backlogs have reached
crisis proportions, while the agency wastes resources revisiting issues
already resolved and harassing honest petitioners with requests for paperwork
unrelated to their immigration eligibility. Making matters worse, the public's
only available avenue to resolve government errors and problems is a contractor-run
800 number that has proven to be useless to deal with these issues.
Adding
insult to injury, the proposed fee increase would force applicants to pay
for these failures. As CIS loses files, errs on more and more applications,
and provides no viable avenue to resolve problems, lawsuits to force action
have increased. The proposed budget for CIS factors the costs of these
suits into the fees by proposing a surcharge to pay for them. The Equal
Access to Justice Act mandates that government agencies pay certain costs
when they take a substantially unjustified position in litigation. CIS
proposes to evade this law by forcing the very people who are harmed by
its actions or inaction to pay the costs of the agency's unjustified positions.
The
Department also has announced that it intends to outsource the immigration
information officer (IIO) function and factors into the proposed fee increase
the cost of conducting an expensive study of this problematic initiative.
Despite numerous problems associated with contracting out the deeply flawed
800 number system, the CIS budget would mandate that applicants pay the
costs of this study to expand this failed concept to cover all user assistance
functions.
I
urge you to write your senators and members of Congress and demand that
Congress appropriate funds for CIS.
Seeking examples of denied religious visa cases on appeal
I am
seeking examples of religious worker cases that have been denied by Citizenship
and Immigration Services and are on appeal. Religious visa cases
are being denied by CIS based upon a flawed holding that the qualifying
religious organization must be a "church." Neither federal immigration
law nor federal regulations make such a requirement. Under this flawed
analysis, no U.S. organization other than a church may hire a religious
worker.
If
your religious organization has such a case on appeal, please contact me
via e-mail: CLICK HERE,
or write to me at P.O. Box 11032, Montgomery, AL 36111-0032.
State now requires minor passport applicants to appear in person
To
enhance the accurate identification of passport applicants and aid in the
prevention of international child abduction and trafficking, the Department
of State’s Bureau of Consular Affairs has begun requiring the personal
appearance of all minors applying for U.S. passports. this applies
to all regular, official and diplomatic passports for children younger
than 14, even if the child has previously been issued a passport.
Prior
to the introduction of this requirement, parents were not routinely required
to bring a child younger than 14 with them when they applied on the child’s
behalf. Now, when applying for a passport on behalf of a minor younger
than 14, parents are required to have their child present and submit documentation
of parental relationship and consent, as well as comply with all other
documentation requirements for the issuance of a passport.
The
State Department announced that the personal appearance requirement for
all minors is a further step toward ensuring the integrity of the passport
application process. It said the change would help to verify the identity
of minor applicants and aid in the prevention of international child abduction
and trafficking.
Alabama senator's bill could cripple Alabama's economy
National Immigration Law Center analysis
Alabama
Senator Jeff Sessions' bill to compel local law enforcement officers to
enforce federal immigration laws could have a crippling effect on the economies
of agricultural states, such as Alabama. S. 1906 would compel state
and local police to enforce federal civil immigration law, going even further
than a similar bill introduced in the House earlier this year.
If the bill becomes law, any interaction between state or local police
and people who look or sound foreign would be fraught with risk, and states
would be compelled to spend limited resources trying to decide who is in
violation of immigration law, instead of tracking down and arresting rapists,
murders, robbers, and other criminals who do us harm.
The
bill’s provisions also would force states to adopt policing policies to
enforce federal laws instead of making judgments about what best promotes
public safety, which is strangely at odds with the conservative Republican
philosophy of preventing the federal government from meddling in state
affairs.
The
Homeland Security Enhancement Act (S. 1906) was introduced on November
20, 2003, by Sens. Sessions (R-AL) and Zell Miller (D-GA). Its counterpart
in the House is HR 2671, the Clear Law Enforcement for Criminal Alien Removal
(CLEAR) Act. The Senate bill reportedly was drafted to meet policy
positions and recommendations provided by Kris Kobach, former counsel to
Attorney General John Ashcroft and currently Republican candidate for Congress
in Kansas.
Following
are among the Senate bill’s key provisions:
It
would criminalize all immigration law violations committed by non–U.S.
citizens. (HR 2671 criminalizes only those violations related to
“unlawful presence.”)
The
bill would force states to enforce immigration law by withholding State
Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP) funds, which reimburse states
for incarcerating noncitizens, if the states do not repeal policies that
limit police enforcement of immigration laws.
Cash-strapped
states would be required to take on these additional responsibilities without
receiving additional federal funding. In contrast to HR 2671, S.
1906 would not provide states with funds obtained via the forced forfeiture
of undocumented immigrants’ assets, or from visa processing fees or administrative
judgments. Neither does the bill provide for grants to
state and local police agencies to pay for the equipment and technology
they would need to enforce federal immigration law.
The
bill would authorize entering specific types of immigration information
into the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) database — i.e., records
regarding noncitizens who have received final orders of removal, agreed
to voluntarily depart the U.S., or overstayed temporary visas. (HR
2671, in contrast, would not limit the type of immigration violation –
related information that could be entered into the NCIC.)
The
bill would require that the federal government acquire enough new detention
space to hold 10,000 more individuals in federal custody or at federal
expense, and the bill includes new provisions related to state and local
facilities maintaining an incarcerated criminal non–U.S. citizen in custody
between the time that the individual’s criminal sentence has been served
and when the federal government can arrive to take the person into custody.
The
bill would, in effect, require that driver’s licenses issued by states
to non–U.S. citizens who are not permanent residents expire when the noncitizen’s
authorization to remain in the U.S. expires. The bill would force
the states to adopt such a policy by forbidding federal agencies to accept
as identification any driver’s license that does not expire with the nonimmigrant
visitor’s authorization to be in the U.S. and by denying highway safety
funds to states that issue driver’s licenses to noncitizens who are not
in lawful status.
The
bill would narrowly limit the documents that the federal government could
accept as identification when providing federal public benefits or services
in the U.S. The only acceptable documents would be (1) those issued
by a U.S. or state authority and subject to verification by law enforcement
agencies or (2) passports in the possession of people lawfully in the U.S.
who are from countries whose nationals are not required to obtain a visa
before visiting the U.S. (i.e., nonimmigrant visitors from “visa waiver”
countries). If it became law, this provision would preclude the use
for such purposes of a vast array of commonly accepted identity documents
issued by countries around the world to their citizens, including passports,
consular ID cards, national ID cards, birth certificates, foreign driver’s
licenses, and school ID cards. It would also preclude the use of
many nongovernmental documents issued in the U.S. itself, including hospital
birth certificates, school ID cards, and church baptismal certificates.
COMMENT:
If S. 1906 becomes law and is enforced in Alabama, immigrant labor will
be deported or leave, thus sending Alabama's agricultural economy into
a power dive. This bill has little -- if anything -- to do with homeland
security or national security. I respectfully suggest that Alabama's
junior senator focus on legislation to fight terrorism and leave Alabama's
law enforcement communities and immigrant labor alone.
New immigration reform bill filed in Senate
National Immigration Law Center analysis
On January 21, 2004, Senators Chuck Hagel (R-Nebraska) and Tom Daschle (D-South Dakota) introduced legislation to reform immigration laws (S. 2010). The bill would:
1.
Provide a mechanism for most currently undocumented workers to earn permanent
legal status;
2.
Significantly reduce the waiting time for immigrants coming to join U.S.
citizen and legal permanent resident family members; and
3.
Create a new temporary worker program including a path to permanent status
for temporary workers who set down roots in the U.S. and choose to stay.
One
serious flaw in S. 2010 is its failure to adequately protect U.S. workers
-- including immigrants -- from employers who seek to abuse the new temporary
worker program. For example, the bill leaves in place the damaging
Supreme Court decision in Hoffman Plastic Compounds v. NLRB, in which the
Court restricted the remedies available to an undocumented worker whose
employer violates worker protection laws.
It
is important not to promise worker protections that will not be enforceable
or actually available in practice. S. 2010 relies too heavily on
employer attestations and administrative remedies. It does
not permit a worker to go to court to redress a violation.
Another
flaw in S. 2010 is that it leaves a hole in the earned legalization program
that could prevent as many as a million or more undocumented immigrants
from obtaining legal status, undermining the intention of creating a clean
slate under the new rules. In addition, the bill fails to provide
for such needs as English language instruction, basic health care, and
economic development to rapidly increase immigrant productivity in the
U.S. economy, and to help states and communities adjust to the uneven distribution
of needs and opportunities that immigrants provide.
Despite
its flaws, the bill is thoughtfully constructed and its introduction initiates
a new phase in the debate for real immigration reform in America.
Following
are some of the highlights of S. 2010. The bill would:
Title I: Family Reunification
Reclassify the spouses and minor children of legal permanent residents (LPR’s) as “immediate relatives” not subject to per-country immigration limits. It would provide that visas issued to immediate relatives would no longer be counted against the worldwide 480,000 cap for family-based immigration. And it would make more visas available to other family categories. According to the authors, State Department data suggests that these changes would eliminate the visa backlog in family immigration categories within about four years.
Title II: Willing Worker Program
Modify the current H-2B temporary worker program and create a new H-2C program. Together the two programs would provide up to 350,000 temporary visas each year, a more than five-fold increase over the current H-2B program visa availability. The spouse and children of a participating worker would be permitted to accompany the worker, though they would be ineligible to work unless they qualify independently for temporary worker status. The temporary visas would not be available to undocumented immigrants who have lived illegally in the U.S. for more than 6 months (because the temporary visa applications would have to be made from abroad and undocumented immigrants would be subject to the 3 and 10 year bars).
A key feature of the new programs — and one which strongly differentiates it from the President’s guestworker plan — is that the employer or the worker’s union would be permitted to petition at any time for a temporary worker to remain in the U.S. permanently. In addition, after three years of temporary status the worker would not need to rely on the employer because she would be eligible to petition for herself.
Employer requirements and worker protections
An
employer wishing to make use of the program would pay a per-worker fee
and would be required to abide by certain regulations designed to protect
U.S. workers. For example, participating employers would be required
to attest that they are not involved in a labor dispute, that they have
tried and failed to recruit U.S. workers, and that they will pay the prevailing
wage to the temporary workers. S. 2010 provides an administrative
complaint procedure for violations of these provisions that could result
in a fine against the employer and equitable relief for the aggrieved worker,
plus the employer could be barred from participating in the guestworker
program for one or more years. Importantly, though, workers would
have no access to court to enforce their rights.
Temporary
workers would be entitled to the full protection of federal, state, and
local labor laws enjoyed by other workers and there are some important
provisions such as whistleblower protections intended to address the particular
vulnerabilities faced by guestworkers who endeavor to enforce these rights.
But unfortunately labor laws are notoriously insufficient to protect all
workers in the sectors where immigrant workers are concentrated, and S.
2010 provides no additional resources to improve enforcement of workplace
protections such as minimum wage and worker safety.
Sadly,
because labor law enforcement is so ineffective, the only practical solution
available to an exploited worker is often to change jobs. S. 2010
includes a limited implementation of an important feature known as “portability”
under which temporary workers would be permitted to change employers without
losing their right to remain in the U.S. Under S. 2010, the new employer
would have to meet the qualifications and paperwork requirements for participation
in the temporary worker program, and would have to file the same petition
as the original employer. In some cases the worker would also be
required to obtain a waiver from the Department of Homeland Security before
switching jobs.
Title III: Earned Adjustment
Provide
legal permanent residence to workers who can show continuous physical presence
(other than brief, casual, or innocent absences) for at least five years
before the date of introduction, who pay a $1,000 fine, plus fees, and
can meet certain other requirements such as payment of taxes, knowledge
of English and civics (or enrollment in classes), and clearance of a law
enforcement and criminal background check. To qualify, individuals
would also have to prove that they worked during at least three of the
five years before introduction, and that they worked at least one year
after the bill was enacted. Exceptions to the work requirement include
children under 20, the worker’s spouse, and persons granted humanitarian
waivers for such reasons as pregnancy or disability.
An
additional a “transitional worker” program would be available to some undocumented
immigrants who do not satisfy the continuous residence and/or work requirements
and have worked in the U.S. for at least two of the five years before introduction
of the bill. An apparent drafting error makes the specific requirements
necessary to qualify for this provision a little murky. Upon application,
payment of fine and fees and security clearance, whose eligible would be
granted a 3-year temporary status and would eventually qualify for permanent
residence if they work for at least two years after enactment of the bill.
Note
that depending on how the transitional worker program is interpreted, it
is likely that a million or more persons who have been in the U.S. in undocumented
status would be unable to qualify for either the earned adjustment or the
temporary worker visas.
H-1B visa program in serious trouble
As
readers of the Update know, the number of H-1B visas available for fiscal
year 2004, which began October 1, 2003, dropped from 195,000 to 65,000.
Citizenship and Immigration Services has reported H-1B visa issuance and
cases for the first quarter of the fiscal year, and the news is very bad.
Based upon its first quarter figures, 43,500 H-1B cases that could count
against the 65,000 cap for fiscal year 2004 have been either approved or
are in the queue for adjudication.
For
employers, this means that if they want to hire a foreign national employee
this year, the H-1B visa petition should be filed now.
For
international students, this means that there will be no H-1B visas available
when they graduate in May or June.
Bush proposes
temporary work visa program,
notarios
quickly began a feeding frenzy nationwide
On
January 7, 2004, President Bush proposed immigration reforms that include
a three-year temporary employment visa for both legal and illegal aliens,
whether inside or outside of the United States. But that is all it
was: a proposal. On January 8, 2004, Spanish-speaking notarios
(notary public) all over the United States were out in force, telling immigrants
that they can get these visas now and stealing money from them through
fraud.
There
is no temporary employment visa available for aliens who entered the United
States without inspection (i.e., illegally) or who entered legally and
overstayed their visas. I repeat: THERE IS NO VISA AVAILABLE! Notarios
(notary public) who are taking money from immigrants in the United States
are criminals and should be reported to a local district attorney for prosecution.
What the Bush immigration reform proposal does
1.
Provides that American employers must make reasonable efforts to find U.S.
workers to fill available jobs.
2.
Provides for temporary worker status to undocumented men and women now
employed in the United States and to those in foreign countries who have
been offered employment here. The workers under this temporary, three-year
visa status must pay a one-time fee to register in the program, abide by
the rules, and return home after their period of work expires. There would
be an opportunity for visa renewal.
3.
States that the United States government will work with other countries
to allow aliens working in the United States to receive credit in their
nations' retirement systems and will support the creation of tax-preferred
savings accounts they can collect when they return to their native countries.
4.
Provides that temporary workers in this visa program will be allowed to
travel back and forth between their countries of origin and the United
States.
5.
Provides for a reasonable increase in the annual limit of legal immigrants
to benefit those who follow the lawful path to citizenship.
6.
Provides that the temporary employment visa program should not connect
to a green card or citizenship. However, it should not prohibit a
temporary employment visa participant from obtaining green card status
through the existing process. It should not permit undocumented workers
to gain an advantage over those who have followed the rules.
7.
Requires employers to report identifying information about temporary workers
who are laid off or fired to the Department of Homeland
Bush
has consistently stated that he is against "blanket amnesty." According
to The Washington Post, Republican officials said the Bush proposal
draws on, among other sources, a bill introduced by Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.).
It would create a Web-based job registry to be run by the Labor Department.
Employers would post job opportunities that would be available first to
U.S. workers and then to immigrants, who would be allowed to come under
a new, three-year visa for temporary workers.
Immigration
reform was among the centerpieces of Bush’s platform when he ran for president
in 2000. Six days before the Sept. 11 terror attacks, Bush met with
Mexican President Vicente Fox to discuss revamping the two countries’ policies
and laws concerning illegal immigration.
Last
fall, undocumented workers were again pushed to the political forefront.
There are now three bills in the Senate designed to create a process for
workers already here illegally to receive work permits. Some of the
legislation also proposes measures for tighter security at the borders.
Bush has not publicly endorsed any of the bills.
Because
2004 is an election year, Bush may be using the issue to draw voters in
without actually driving legislation through Congress. The president
has tried to court Hispanic voters with the goal of increasing his percentage
of the Hispanic vote in the November general election.
US-VISIT system goes into effect January 5
US-VISIT
began operation at 115 airports and 14 seaports on January 5. Only people
entering with a visa are subject to US-VISIT procedures, expected to be
about 19 million people at airports and 4 million at seaports.
The
"entry solution" will consist of a two-print fingerprinting of index fingers
and a photograph. Exceptions to the photographic requirement, such as for
women with religious garb, will be available.
The
"exit solution" is not as clear because, for the time being, exits can
be effected at Ports of Departure ("PODs") that do not have US-VISIT capabilities.
One solution under consideration is the matching of passenger manifests
as a means to help substantiate departure. There will be a counseling and
education process for those who failed to comply with the exit requirements.
.
DHS announces
implementation of NSEERS program
The
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced December 1 that the National
Security Entry/Exit Registration System (NSEERS) re-registration requirement
that required aliens to re-register after 30-days and one year of continuous
presence in the United States will be suspended. But a new rule will
allow DHS to notify individual nonimmigrant aliens subject to NSEERS registration
to appear for one or more additional registration interviews.
NSEERS
was created ostensibly to increase national security, but it has not resulted
in any alien being classified as a threat to national security.
Following
is a portion of the DHS accouncement issued December 1:
"The
Department of Homeland Security has decided to suspend the National Security
Entry/Exit Registration System (NSEERS) re-registration requirement that
mandated aliens to re-register after 30-days and one year of continuous
presence in the United States. The new process is outlined in the interim
rule published in the Federal Register.
"NSEERS
established a national registry for temporary foreign visitors (non-immigrant
aliens) arriving from certain countries, or who meet a combination of intelligence-based
criteria, and are identified as presenting an elevated national security
concern. The program has collected detailed information about the background
and purpose of an individual’s visit to the United States, the periodic
verification of their location and activities, and departure confirmation.
NSEERS was the first step taken by the Department of Justice and then DHS
in order to comply with the development of the Congressionally- mandated
requirement for a comprehensive entry-exit program by 2005.
"The
domestic registration program included citizens or nationals from Afghanistan,
Algeria, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Egypt, Eritrea, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Jordan,
Kuwait, Libya, Lebanon, Morocco, North Korea, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Somalia,
Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates, and Yemen. However,
to date, individuals from more than 150 countries have been registered
in the NSEERS program.
"Most
of the foreign visitors registered are students, individuals in the U.S.
on extended business travel, or individuals visiting family members for
lengthy periods. The requirement to register does not apply to U.S. citizens,
lawful permanent residents (green card holders), refugees, asylum applicants,
asylum grantees, and diplomats or others admitted under "A" or "G" visas.
"At
the time of initial registration, all individuals were given instructions
that they had to re-register in one year, or after thirty days if initially
registered at a port-of-entry. The numbers who were to re-register were
expected to vary from last year because some individuals may have left
the country; traveled outside and back into the country (changing their
one-year anniversary date to the most recent entry registration date);
or adjusted their status, eliminating the need for re-registration.
Changes made by the new rule
"There
will no longer be a 30-day or one-year re-registration requirement, effective
with the publishing of the new rule in the Federal Register.
"In
place of the previous requirement, the new rule will allow DHS, as a matter
of discretion, to notify individual nonimmigrant aliens subject to NSEERS
registration to appear for one or more additional continuing registration
interviews in those particular cases where it may be necessary to determine
whether the alien is complying with the conditions of his or her nonimmigrant
visa status and admission.
"The
rule also provides that when an alien who is monitored under Student and
Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS) notifies DHS of a change of
address or change of educational institution through SEVIS, it also constitutes
a notification for the purposes of NSEERS registration."
Travel document form changes
CIS has changed Form I-131, Application for Travel Document. Only the 9/19/03 version of Form I-131 will be accepted after December 31, 2003. Although CIS indicated that prior versions can be used until that date. There are two other versions of the form, dated 1/18/02 and 12/10/91. Please use the 9/19/03 version to avoid rejection.
CIS has new case status online check
But the problem is that the hard-copy receipts our clients get from CIS say one thing (say, a processing time of 60 days), and the online case status says 120 days? Which is correct? Probably the latter. Go to the CIS online case status check: CLICK HERE. (Note: Clicking on this link will take you away from the Immigration Law Center on the Internet.)
Employment eligibility
pilot program extension approved;
EB-5 (employment-creation
visa) regional centers extension approved
On November 12, the Senate passed by unanimous consent S.1685, a bill to extend the employment eligibility pilot program for five years and to expand it to all 50 states. The bill would also require a report on how to resolve problems with the program. Attached to S. 1685 was a measure to extend EB-5 regional centers for an additional five years.
Expansion of employment eligibility verification defeated
A bill
that would have expanded an employment eligibility verification pilot program
to all 50 states was defeated in the House on October 28. The program
currently operates in six states: California, Texas, Florida, New
York, Illinois, and Nebraska. The uses of the program would have
broadened by permitting the program's use to transmit citizenship or immigration
status information, in addition to identity and employment veridication
information.
To
become law, the bill had to receive a two-thirds vote in the House, but
fell short.
In
January, 2002, the Department of Justice commissioned report required under
the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996
from two private contractors that found serious flaws in the program, including
failure to provide timely and accurate data due, in part, to inaccurate
and outdated CIS computer databases. Instead of addressing these
critical flaws, the defeated bill, H.R. 2359, would have simply expanded
the program.
Immigration in the News
Former embassy employee charged in visa scheme
MIAMI (AP) -- A former
employee at the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City is accused of conspiring with
a Colombian couple in a visa bribery scheme that allowed dozens of cartel
members and leftist guerrillas to get doctored visas.
Julieta
Quiroz, 49, a naturalized U.S. citizen from Nicaragua, is accused of making
at least $345,000 for about 180 visa request to enter the United States,
according to criminal complaints filed by Assistant U.S. Attorney Larry
Bardfeld in Miami federal court.
She
is also accused of conspiring with Colombians Olga Elena Ramirez and her
husband, Juan Carlos Ramirez, who allegedly arranged to get some of those
visas to traffickers and guerrillas with the Revolutionary Armed Forces
of Colombia.
The
three were charged with conspiracy, bribery and visa fraud. Juan Carlos
Ramirez also laundered money in Mexico for an unspecified Colombian cocaine
cartel, according to a court affidavit.
The
charges are a result of a joint operation between Department of Homeland
Security immigration agents and the Department of State's Diplomatic Security
investigators.
Quiroz
had resigned from the U.S. State Department before her arrest on Friday,
said Stuart Patt, a State Department spokesman. Her husband, Walter,
is an attache at the U.S. Embassy in Nicaragua. -- Excerpt from an article
published by The Associated Press, April
7, 2004.
Immigrants blamed for U.S. environmental problems
EDITOR'S NOTE: I normally do not agree with Texas columnist Molly Ivins, but she is a good writer. Following is an excerpt from her column published on April 7, 2004.
One
of the weirdest environmental developments of late is the attempt by right-wing
anti-immigrant groups to take over the venerable Sierra Club. The
latest fad among these anti-immigrant groups, many of which have ties to
disgusting racist groups, is to blame immigrants for our environmental
problems.
I
see a lot of Mexican immigrants, and some of them must be illegal, gardening
in this country, but I don't know of many who run power plants that spew
tons of mercury into the air. You hardly ever see an illegal Mexican
immigrant on a snowmobile in Yellowstone. Illegal Mesicans are seldom
in charge of timber companies that want to clear-cut the national forests.
It's not often that illegal Mexicans run chemical companies that dump toxins
into rivers and wetlands. It's rare to find an illegal Mexican in
the Bush administration deciding to end the Superfund cleanup prorgrams
or to lower air and water quality standards. -- Molly Ivins
Lawmakers working on compromise immigration reform plan
WASHINGTON (AP) - Conservatives
balking at President Bush's proposal to grant illegal immigrants three-year
work permits are floating a counteroffer that would hamper his efforts
to woo Hispanic voters in November's election.
It's
a dicey political predicament for the president, one that seems likely
to push a final vote on key elements of his plan into 2005, well after
the November balloting. Rep. Charlie Norwood, R-Ga., and Sens. Zell Miller,
D-Ga., and Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., are conditioning their support for Bush's
plan on Congress agreeing to also broaden the power of state and local
police to arrest suspected illegal residents.
"If
they don't have this in it, they'll pass that bill over my cold, dead political
body," Sessions said of Bush's proposal.
Sessions,
Miller and Norwood say they speak for thousands of conservatives who believe
stronger enforcement of immigration laws must accompany any plan that would
let illegal immigrants remain in the country legally. Because federal
immigration agents are stretched too thin, they argue, 650,000 local police
officers should be given the authority and resources to go after immigrants
still undocumented after Bush's plan takes effect. Immigrant advocates
say the distrust that would raise between Hispanics and police would erase
any political advantage the president might hope to gain.
"Latinos
very much support law enforcement, which is why we think making police
officers immigration agents is a terrible idea," said Cecilia Munoz, vice
president for policy at the National Council of La Raza. "If the
victim of domestic violence feels she can't be calling police because they
might be asking for papers, that's bad for the public safety."
Many
Senate Democrats agree that conditioning the work permits for illegals
on deputizing local police to help enforce immigration laws would do more
harm than good.
"Our
police officers have gone about the business of protecting their communities,
and left the federal government to enforce civil immigration laws," said
Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy, senior Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee.
"The division of labor makes a great deal of sense, and the burden faced
by those who would change it should be awfully high."
Norwood
said his Clear Law Enforcement for the Criminal Alien Removal Act could
actually be popular among Latinos because it targets law breakers, particularly
those identified as crime suspects in a national computer database.
"If
you got tough with the enforcement of our laws, I honestly believe you
would get more votes from the Hispanic community," Norwood said.
Administration
officials are treading carefully on the concept of local enforcement, but
supporters of the Norwood and Sessions bills are interpreting some of their
recent comments to mean they might be open to the idea. Questioned
by Sessions at a recent hearing, Asa Hutchinson, the Homeland Security
Department's undersecretary for border and transportation security, conceded
there are not enough federal agents to go after illegal immigrants every
time the police call them in.
Hutchinson then pointed
out that Bush is asking Congress to double work-site enforcement, detention
and removal facilities in the 2005 budget. -- Excerpt from an article published
by The Associated Press, March 1, 2004.
Paying more for worse immigration service
The
U.S. Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services provides lousy service,
has lengthy backlogs and takes far longer than its own standard suggests
to deliver essential products: green cards, citizenship approvals and authorizations
for next-of-kin immigration to the United States. Now the bureau wants
to impose steep fee hikes. It shouldn't. Not until Congress and the bureau
restructure the agency's funding formula. Otherwise, the bureau faces continued
underfunding and gridlock.
Bureau
officials say that double-digit fee increases are necessary in the aftermath
of 9/11. ''The cost of doing business with respect to national security
has gone up,'' said Russ Konocke, a spokesman. We agree that national security
is a critical concern and that immigration services play a key role in
assuring that terrorists and other high-risk people are kept out of the
country. But this is exactly why the bureau should have a stable funding
structure that includes government money as well as what it earns in fees.
Deteriorating services
Congress,
however, has mandated that immigration services be self-funded. Yet it
keeps piling on unfunded mandates, such as free naturalization for U.S.
soldiers. It also has cut lucrative money makers, such as the popular 245(i)
provision that allowed immigrants entitled to legalize to do so without
having to go abroad first.
Because
of such chronic underfunding, the problems that caused immigration services
to deteriorate in the 1990s remain in place. The bureau still suffers from
inadequate staff and space and antiquated computer systems. Not surprisingly,
backlogs have grown. For example, the bureau's Texas Service Center is
now working on residency applications that were filed 2 ½ years
ago. Unless there is improvement, an applicant who filed today could expect
to wait eight years for residency.
For
this kind of service, the bureau wants to increase charges to $315 for
residency petitions, up from $255. Applying for U.S. citizenship will cost
$320, up from $260. The bureau wants to stretch fees to cover even legal
costs for lawsuits that the agency loses. Immigrants shouldn't be forced
to pay for the bureau's mistakes and failed experiments.
Reduced funding
The
prospects aren't getting better, either. President Bush recommends a 10
percent funding increase for the Department of Homeland Security. But the
bureau, which is part of DHS, is targeted for a 41 percent decrease in
funding.
What
we feared would happen in DHS reorganization is now coming true: Immigration
services are being starved as resources are poured into enforcement, although
both are essential to national security. Fee increases won't fix the problem.
Fee hikes will exacerbate the situation by making legal immigration so
unaffordable that greater numbers will live here illegally. That might
reduce backlogs, but it won't improve national security. The objective
should be better security and immigration services, not worse. -- Excerpt
from an editorial published in The
Miami Herald, February 9, 2004.
Can you prove you are a U.S. citizen? Are your 'papers' in order?
ST.
LOUIS, Mo. -- Imagine the following scenario. You're driving to work. You're
in a hurry. Lights flash, a siren wails, and you're pulled over for speeding,
the officer explains. You present your insurance card, registration,
and driver's license, but the officer suddenly demands to see proof that
you are an American citizen -- and if you're not, then proof that you are
in the country legally.
Pending
federal legislation would soon give policemen the power to do just that
– become federal immigration agents. The measure, dubbed
the CLEAR Act, (Clear
Law Enforcement for Criminal Alien Removal Act), is one of a series of
post 9-11 attempts on behalf of the federal government to tighten national
security. Some see the measure as a long overdue way to improve the country's
safety from foreign terrorists and sweep up any illegal presence. Others
see it as a misguided effort that jeopardizes civil rights under the guise
of improving the safety of American people.
In
reality, some critics say, this is a classic example of the eternal tug-of-war
between national security and civil liberties.
"Monitoring
immigration is a function of the INS, not our local police departments,"
said Missouri Congressman Lacy Clay. "I am not convinced
that Missouri's police
departments should be doubling as immigration agents."
For
some police departments around the country, the proposal is a source of
worry for reasons far more practical than image. For example, many
state law enforcement agencies oppose the plan, saying they don't have
the money, manpower and know-how to handle immigration issues, a jurisdiction
historically reserved for the federal authorities.
The
St. Louis City Police Department is not thrilled with the prospect of juggling
more work—atop an already full plate with 400,000 calls for service a year.
"It's
not a task that our officers would absorb easily," said Police Chief Joe
Mokwa. "It could take away resources from our essential responsibilities.
It's a distraction I'd rather avoid."
In
addition, police departments fear that giving local police authority over
immigration would further alienate already fearful and tight-lipped immigrants
from law-enforcement — and make the police officer's job of collecting
information and solving crimes in immigrant enclaves infinitely harder.
"We
have officers assigned to work specifically with the International Institute,"
Mokwa said. "And I can tell you, immigrants -- even the ones who are here
legally -- are often intimidated by police and hesitant to talk to us."
In
an attempt to assuage such fears, a number of police departments have gone
so far as to put out public service announcements stating that they do
not enforce immigration laws.
Departments
that have spoken against the CLEAR Act include the police departments of
Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami, New York City,
Philadelphia Seattle
and Washington, D.C. -- Excerpt from an article published in The
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, January 12, 2004.
HERE IS OUR WARNING AGAIN: Your friends, relatives, and co-workers are good sources of bad information about immigration and nationality law and federal administrative procedures. If you really want to know what to do about an immigration or visa situation, please consult a qualified immigration lawyer. If you don't know one, please call the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA) Lawyer Referral Service in Washington, D.C., at (800) 954-0254. AILA's Lawyer Referral Service cannot assure you that you will get the best immigration lawyer, but you should be able to get competent legal help and guidance. Remember: INS considers every petition or application filed as a legal case for adjudication. When people help themselves or others by filling out forms and filing them with INS, they are filing a legal case before an administrative agency of the federal government for adjudication. If the case runs into trouble or is denied, the alien and his family members rarely know what to do next or how to get the legal matter resolved. Some visa applicants have monthly telephone bills that are larger than any fee they will ever pay to a qualified immigration lawyer. For information about how to hire and work with an immigration lawyer, click on the following link: Why Hire an Immigration Lawyer? Also, don't forget to check out our web links to other helpful (and FREE) information: CLICK HERE
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