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DISCLAIMER |
This information provided is not intended to replace the advice
of an attorney but is merely provided as a public service. Each
immigration case is different. For more information, consult with
Thomas Esparza, Jr., Board Certified Specialist
in Immigration and Nationality Law with more than 29 years of experience.
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> Other Information
Fact Sheet: Improving Border Security and Immigration Within Existing Law Release Date: August 10, 2007
Today, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff and Commerce
Secretary Carlos Gutierrez Announced a Series of Reforms the
Administration Will Pursue to Address Border Security and
Immigration Challenges. The following reforms represent steps the
Administration can take within the boundaries of existing law to
secure our borders more effectively, improve interior and worksite
enforcement, streamline existing guest worker programs, improve the
current immigration system, and help new immigrants assimilate into
American culture.
Border Security
1. The Administration Will Continue to Strengthen Security at the
Border with Additional Personnel and Infrastructure. We are
committed to implementing the following border security measures by
December 31, 2008:
18,300 Border Patrol agents
370 miles of fencing
300 miles of vehicle barriers
105 camera and radar towers
Three additional UAVs
We will also work to ensure that 1,700 more Border Patrol Agents and
an additional UAV are added in 2009.
2. The Administration will Maintain the Policy of "Catch and Return"
for Illegal Aliens Apprehended at the Border. For years, limited
detention space forced the release of many illegal border crossers
from nations other than Mexico with nothing more than a Notice to
Appear for a hearing before an immigration judge. Many aliens
ignored these notices and instead blended into U.S. society. The
Administration has ended this practice and instituted a policy of
"catch and return," ensuring that all removable aliens caught trying
to cross the border illegally are held until they can be removed.
The Administration Will Further Increase Funding for Detention Beds
So There are Places to Detain 31,500 Illegal Aliens Until They Can
Be Returned.
The Administration Will Also Press Recalcitrant Countries to Work
with the United States to Repatriate Citizens Who Are in the United
States Illegally.
3. The Departments of State and Homeland Security Will Strengthen
Legal Efforts to Keep International Gang Members out of the United
States. Gangs are at the root of many U.S. crime problems today, and
many of the most dangerous gangs draw significant membership from
abroad. The Federal government already denies visas to known members
of certain gangs from China, the former Soviet Union, and El
Salvador. Today, the President is directing the State Department and
the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to expand this list of
dangerous organized gangs from other nations and to ensure that
members of those gangs are barred from entry into the United States.
4. The Administration Will Expand Exit Requirements So Persons Who
Overstay Limited-Duration Visits To The United States Can Be
Identified.
By The End Of 2008, The US-VISIT Exit Requirement Will Be Underway
At All U.S. Airports And Seaports. The Department of Homeland
Security will continue to explore effective and cost-efficient means
of establishing biometric exit requirements at land border
crossings.
The Administration Will Establish A New Land-Border Exit System For
Guest Workers, Starting On A Pilot Basis. This will help ensure that
temporary workers in the country now follow the mandate to leave
when their work authorization expires.
5. The Administration Will Require All Travelers To Our Ports Of
Entry To Use Passports Or Other Similar Secure Documents. Since
January 2007, air travelers have been required to carry a passport
for entry into the United States. Because of passport processing
backlogs, a temporary accommodation has been made for U.S. citizens
traveling in the Western Hemisphere, which will be phased out.
Starting January 31, 2008, DHS will phase in a requirement for
passports or other secure documents for sea and land ports of entry.
6. Beginning This Fall, The Secretary Of Homeland Security Will
Deliver Regular "State Of The Border" Reports. These reports will
keep the American people informed of the Federal Government's
progress in securing the border and hold the Administration
accountable for continuing improvement.
Interior Enforcement
7. The Administration Is Training Hundreds Of State And Local Law
Enforcement Officers To Address Illegal Immigration In Their
Communities. The Administration is maintaining the 287(g) program
and expanding other measures that help State and local law
officials. These measures include a broad array of enforcement
tools, such as formal task forces, greater use of the ICE Law
Enforcement Support Center, delegated border search and seizure
authority under Title 19, and enhanced partnerships to address
location-specific threats, such as gangs.
8. By This Fall, U.S. Immigration And Customs Enforcement Teams
Devoted To Removing Fugitive Aliens Will Have Been Quintupled In
Less Than Three Years. There were 15 seven-member Fugitive
Operations Teams in 2005. As of this week there are 68; there will
be 75 by the end of September.
9. The Justice Department Will Initiate Regulatory Action To Close
The "Voluntary Departure" Loophole Manipulated By Many Illegal
Immigrants. Illegal immigrants who settle their cases by agreeing to
voluntarily depart sometimes then gain extra time inside the United
States by filing a procedural motion to reopen the case. New
regulations will clarify that filing such a motion will terminate
the voluntary departure status and make the alien subject to the
order of removal. They will also set a presumptive $3,000 civil
penalty for failing to comply with a voluntary departure agreement.
Worksite Enforcement
10. Today, The Department Of Homeland Security Issued A "No-Match"
Regulation That Will Help Employers Ensure Their Workers Are Legal
And Help The Government Identify And Crack Down On Employers Who
Knowingly Hire Illegal Workers. In cases in which an employer has a
significant number of employees with inaccurate personal identity
information, the Social Security Administration will send the
employer a "No-Match" letter. The regulation clarifies that
employers may be held liable if they ignore the "No Match" problems
by failing to take specified steps within 90 days of receiving the
letter.
11. In The Coming Months, The Administration Will Publish A
Regulation That Will Reduce The Number Of Documents That Employers
Must Accept To Confirm The Identity And Work Eligibility Of Their
Employees. Presently, no fewer than 29 categories of documents can
be used to establish identity and work eligibility. Employers have
little capacity to verify the authenticity of these documents, and
the sheer quantity of accepted documents is an invitation to fraud.
This regulation will reduce unlawful employment by weeding out
insecure documents now used often for identity fraud.
12. As A Civil Counterpart To The Administration's Strategy Of Using
Criminal Investigations To Deter Illegal Employment, The Department
Of Homeland Security Will Raise The Civil Fines Imposed On Employers
Who Knowingly Hire Illegal Immigrants By Approximately 25 Percent.
Efforts to secure the border will fail unless the "magnet" that
attracts illegals is turned off. Unfortunately, the fines for
relying on illegal workers are so modest that some companies treat
them as little more than a cost of doing business. DHS will use
existing authority to update civil fines for inflation in order to
boost fines by about 25 percent, as much as is allowed under current
law.
13. The Administration Will Continue To Expand Criminal
Investigations Against Employers Who Knowingly Hire Large Numbers Of
Illegal Aliens. Arrests by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
for criminal violations have increased from 24 in FY 1999 to a
record 716 in FY 2006. There have been 742 criminal arrests since
the beginning of FY 2007 (through July 31), and there is anecdotal
evidence that companies are taking notice and adjusting their
business practices to follow the law.
14. The Administration Will Commence a Rulemaking Process To Require
All Federal Contractors And Vendors To Use E-Verify, The Federal
Electronic Employment Verification System, To Ensure That Their
Employees Are Authorized To Work In The United States. The Federal
government ought to lead by example. As there are more than 200,000
companies doing Federal business, this will significantly expand use
of E-Verify, and make it more difficult for illegal immigrants to
obtain jobs through fraud.
15. The Administration Will Help States Make Greater Use Of
E-Verify. Some States already mandate the use of E-Verify by some or
all of their hiring agencies, and other States are considering
similar requirements. The Administration will assist such efforts
through outreach and offers of technical assistance.
16. The Administration Will Bolster E-Verify By Expanding The Data
Sources It Can Check. This will make it easier to catch individuals
who commit identity theft. New sources of data will include
cross-checks of visa and passport information.
17. The Administration Will Seek Voluntary State Partners Willing To
Share Their Department Of Motor Vehicles Photos And Records With
E-Verify. Agreements to allow E Verify access to the repository of
photographs in state DMV databases will help prevent illegal
immigrants from using fraudulent driver’s licenses to obtain
employment. Such agreements will also lay the groundwork for further
expansion of the electronic employment eligibility verification
system.
Streamlining Existing Guest-Worker Programs
18. The Department Of Labor (DOL) Will Reform The H-2A Agricultural
Seasonal Worker Program. No sector of the American economy requires
a legal flow of foreign workers more than agriculture, which has
begun to experience severe labor shortages as our Southern border
has tightened. The President has therefore directed DOL to review
the regulations implementing the H-2A program and to institute
changes that will provide farmers with an orderly and timely flow of
legal workers, while protecting the rights of laborers.
19. The Department Of Labor Will Issue Regulations Streamlining The
H-2B Program For Non-Agricultural Seasonal Workers. Because
businesses in seasonal industries such as landscaping and
hospitality frequently have a difficult time locating temporary
workers, the H-2B program has proven quite popular. Some employers
report significant processing delays, however. DOL's proposed rule
will speed processing by moving from a government-certified system
to an employer-attestation system akin to the PERM system that has
reduced backlogs in other areas.
20. The Department Of Homeland Security Will Extend The Visa Term
For Professional Workers From Canada And Mexico To Attract More Of
These Talented Workers To The United States. The United States must
compete for foreign professional workers, and those who elect to
lend their talents to the U.S. economy should be welcomed with open
arms, not given a bureaucratic runaround. Yet the roughly 65,000
workers who enter the United States each year on the TN visa must go
to the trouble of renewing their visa every year. This regulation
will extend the TN visa duration to three years – the same term as
other popular professional visas.
21. The Department Of Homeland Security And The Department Of Labor
Will Study And Report On Potential Administrative Reforms To Visa
Programs For Highly Skilled Workers.
Improving Existing Immigration
22. The Administration Will Reform And Expedite Background Checks
For Immigration. Current mechanisms for conducting immigration
background checks are backed up, slowing processing times and
endangering national security. The Administration is investing
substantial new funds to address the backlog, and the FBI and USCIS
are working together on a variety of projects designed to streamline
existing processes so as to reduce waiting times without sacrificing
security.
23. The President Is Directing The Department Of Homeland Security
And The Social Security Administration To Study The Technical And
Recordkeeping Reforms Necessary To Guarantee That Illegal Aliens Do
Not Earn Credit In Our Social Security System For Illegal Work.
Currently, aliens who make Social Security payments while working
here legally can continue to accrue credits even if they overstay
their visa. Improved data-sharing can lay the foundation for
eventual Congressional action to eliminate this practice (which
proved an obstacle to comprehensive reform). The relevant agencies
are ordered to report to the President with a detailed plan for
eliminating the problem.
Assimilation
24. The Office Of Citizenship Will Announce A Revised Naturalization
Test In September 2007. The new test will emphasize fundamental
concepts of American democracy, basic U.S. history, and the rights
and responsibilities of citizenship. It will inculcate the basic
values we share as Americans, and encourage civic knowledge and
patriotism among prospective citizens.
The New Standardized Test Will Ensure Fairness By Eliminating
Current Wide Variations In The Quality Of Testing Between Regional
Offices.
25. The Office Of Citizenship Will Provide Additional Training For
Volunteers And Adult Educators Who Lead Immigrants Through The
Naturalization Process. In October 2007, the Office of Citizenship
will introduce a web-based training program that covers U.S.
government, civics education, and the naturalization process. To
complement these online materials, USCIS will convene eight regional
training conferences, beginning in October 2007, to improve the
ability of citizenship instructors and volunteers to teach American
history, civics, and the naturalization process to immigrant
students. An on-line training module will also be available by the
end of the year.
26. The Department Of Education Will Launch A Free, Web-Based Portal
To Help Immigrants Learn English, And Expand This Model Over Time.
Knowledge of English is the most important component of
assimilation. An investment in tools to help new Americans learn
English will be repaid many times over in the contributions these
immigrants make to our political discourse, economy, and society.
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