Department of Homeland Security Stands By Controversial Border Crossing ID Rules
Homeland
Security (DHS) Secretary Michael Chertoff Wednesday said new border-crossing
requirements will continue to stay into effect as scheduled, despite opposition
from Congress and concerns from state officials that commerce and tourism will
be disrupted. As reported by The
Congress Daily, Chertoff said that DHS plans to begin phasing in new
requirements under the proposed Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative (WHTI).
Chertoff,
in a speech made last month to a border security advisory panel in
Beginning
last year, DHS requires people coming into the
Another
problem that DHS’ program must contend with is the response from Congress.
Last session, both the House and Senate expressed their opposition,
passing legislation that prohibits DHS from implementing all aspects of the
program until June 2009.
"Congress has mandated a delay for the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative … but [DHS] will nevertheless, in the intervening time, take some reasonable and very important measures to eliminate what I consider to be unacceptable vulnerabilities at our land border," Chertoff said. Due to the congressional restrictions, border inspectors "will still accept many of the documents that are currently available, Chertoff said, adding, "we are not implementing WHTI but we are certainly rationalizing the existing system."
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