USCIS Unveils Updated Version of Backlog Elimination Plan
On
June 16, the Director of USCIS, Eduardo Aguirre, submitted to Congress a revised
version of the INS’ original 2002 Backlog Elimination Plan.
The
2002 plan challenged INS to reach a national average cycle time of six months or
less for all applications by the end of 2003 and included the following
commitments:
·
Achieve a high-level of
performance by establishing clear, concrete milestones and actively monitoring
progress towards these milestones;
·
Transform business
practices by implementing significant information technology improvements and
identifying processing improvements to transform the current way of doing
business; and
·
Ensure integrity by
instituting comprehensive quality assurance measures.
Due
to the tragic events of September 11, 2001 new security responsibilities
increased the duties of USCIS and affected production of adjudicating
applications. The two main programs
that effected production were the National Security Entry Exit Registration
System (NSEERS) which required the registration and fingerprinting of nationals
already living in the United States; and the Student and Exchange Visitor
Information System (SEVIS) which was the replacement of the student immigrant
tracking system including re-certification of schools and increased oversight of
the program. Both of these programs have been transferred to the Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (ICE) bureau within the DHS.
This
updated Backlog Elimination Plan includes a strategy for elimination of all
USCIS backlogs, including those in the Asylum Division.
This plan also meets the requirements of §459(a) of the Homeland
Security Act of 2002, which calls for the submission of a plan to Congress
detailing how USCIS will complete efficiently, fairly, within a reasonable time
the adjudication of non-immigrant, immigrant, naturalization, and Asylum/Refugee
applications and petitions. This
updated plan is intended to
§
Report on the current
size of the application backlog;
§
Identify the next steps
to eliminate the backlog and achieve a six-month or less cycle time target for
all forms by the end of 2006;
§
Establish annual
production goals; and
§
Provide a plan to measure
progress through quarterly reports and on-line information available on each
district office and service center.
Defining
Cases: Pending versus Backlog
Pending
cases are cases that have been received, but not adjudicated.
Backlog cases are cases that are pending but older than their target
cycle time. The original Backlog
Elimination Plan computed applications as: (backlog = current month
pending/average last 12 months’ completions) – processing time targets).
This computation did not accurately quantify the number of applications
that were part of the backlog.
The
Updated Plan will use new computations as: (backlog = pending – last six
months’ receipts). This new computation better reflects the idea that the
USCIS is processing applications within the target cycle time.
This new understanding of the differences between backlog and pending
will allow USCIS to estimate the size of the backlog.
Currently, the backlog is 3.7 million cases out of 6.1 million cases,
including cases in the Asylum Division. And
over the last eight years, due to new reforms, the Asylum Division has reduced
its pending caseload 44%.
The
productivity of USCIS must improve 19.6%, and the Asylum Division’s output
must increase 3.4% in order to achieve cycle time goals and fully eliminate the
backlog. To reach these goals the
USCIS will maintain:
§
Reengineering processes
and automated manual workflow processes wherever possible to achieve greater
efficiencies;
§
Updated policies and
procedures to streamline adjudications and increase the percentage of cases
completed at initial review by an adjudicator;
§
Managed production
against milestones — beginning with collaboratively setting goals, reporting
progress, and identifying additional improvement opportunities; and
§
Work with the Office of
the Ombudsman on pilot projects to test alternative processing approaches and
new applications of proven off-the-shelf technology.
In
February, USCIS began planning for the following pilot initiatives intended to
eliminate backlogs, improve customer service, and enhance national security:
1.
Streamlining existing procedures
§
Risk assessment
§
Form I-90
§
Request for evidence
§
Form I-130
§
Pre-certification
§
Asylum
2.
Quality initiatives
§
National Standard
Operating Procedures
§
The Naturalization
Quality Procedures program
§
Continually updating
field manuals and expanding access to electronic libraries
§
An end product review
process at Service Centers to determine decision quality
§
Assuring adherence to
national standards in the Quality Assurance (QA) program
§
Redesigned internal
communications to provide employees with key information quickly and efficiently
3.
Fraud assessment and deterrence initiatives
4.
Refugee corps
5.
Information technology
§
E-filing
§
InfoPass
§
Case Status Online
The
other components to this updated plan are for USCIS to use backlog elimination
milestones to work with service centers and offices to setup current and future
production plans. USCIS will also
provide Congress with quarterly progress reports to monitor its Backlog
Elimination accomplishments. This
plan, along with the staff and leadership, will ensure that the USCIS will meet
the President’s goals no later than the end of 2006.
A
press release last week from the U.S. Chamber of Congress commended the release
of this updated plan. Randel K.
Johnson, Vice President of Labor, Immigration and Employee Benefits says the
Chamber is looking forward to working with Director Aguirre and his staff to
ensure that these ambitious goals can be met.
While
some agree with the current updated Backlog Elimination Plan, the Federation for
American Immigration Reform (FAIR) reports this week that this objective will be
ineffective as long as the current failed immigration policy remains in place.
The problem, according to Dan Stein, executive director of FAIR, is the
policy of extended family chain migration that is overpowering the system and
must be stopped. According to
Stein, a large percentage of the 3.7 million people waiting to have applications
processed have applied as extended family members of other immigrants.
He suggested that Congress freeze new extended family applications as a
solution to the elimination of the current backlog of petitions.
Immigration
advocates, on the other hand, praised the measure and noted that the number
fraudulent applications will likely decline when interim benefits are no longer
needed due to faster processing. The main note of concern from these groups is
the intention to reduce the number of Requests for Evidence. RFEs are issued
routinely when an examiner is not sure that an applicant is eligible. A recent
USCIS indicated that examiners should more willingly deny a case rather than
issuing an RFE when they believe there is no eligibility for the benefit
offered. Immigration lawyers have indicated that many examiners are not informed
on every aspect of immigration law and the RFE process allows lawyers to explain
their case.
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