Much of Special Registration Program Scrapped
The
Department of Homeland Security will announce today that it is scrapping key
aspects of the controversial National Security Entry/Exit Registration System (NSEERS)
program, commonly referred to as “Special Registration.” The program has
required male nationals of more than two dozen countries (mostly in the Middle
East) to report to Department of Homeland Security offices around the US to be
fingerprinted, photographed and interviewed. Of the 70,000+ individuals
interviewed, more than 13,000 have been placed in deportation proceedings.
Two
aspects of the program will be scrapped. Those
subject to the NSEERS rules must report in for processing within 30 days of
entering the US as well as annually at a set time each year. Both of these
requirements are being suspended under the new rules.
However,
registration at ports of entry, at the time of departing the US and on a
“case-by-case” basis, at DHS’s discretion, will continue.
In
place of the previous requirement, the new rule will allow DHS, as a matter of
discretion, to notify individual nonimmigrant visitors 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 visitor is complying with the conditions of his or her nonimmigrant
visa status and admission.”
Individuals
who were previously required to re-register will no longer have to register
unless they are specifically called in to register as one of the
“case-by-case” registrants.
The
American Immigration Lawyers Association was pleased by the decision, though
complained that it does not go far enough.
“While we are pleased that the Department has
suspended some aspects of this failed program, the program in its entirety
should be terminated. AILA long has maintained that NSEERS is a false
solution to a real problem and does not make us safer. It was deeply flawed when
it was implemented and remains flawed today, more than one year after its
implementation. Furthermore, not one individual has been charged with
terrorism as a result of this program,” said Jeanne Butterfield, Executive
Director of the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA).
“The changes DHS announced today demonstrate
that the program has been a failure,” said Judith Golub, AILA’s Senior
Director of Advocacy and Public Affairs. “We hope that DHS’s actions today
reflect their willingness to review other failed measures that the Department of
Justice had initiated. These programs have not made us safer. What have
they done? They have left immigrant communities feeling besieged, harmed our
relations with foreign governments, and wasted precious resources. In
fact, according to the DHS, the changes announced today will allow the agency to
reallocate almost 62,000 work hours. Just think if they never had
implemented this program, what a difference that many work hours could have made
to a program that really enhanced our security,” continued Golub.
Other immigration advocates questioned how
successful the call in program will be, particularly if one does not receive
notification to come in for questioning. The current system is at least
predictable, such critics contend.
In its explanation of the new rule, the
Department of Homeland Security addressed the issue of whether people required
to re-register already who did not do so would be penalized. The answer to the
question is yes, according to the DHS. Asked whether this is fair, the agency
offered this comment:
“Is it fair that some of the walk-in
registrants have to re-register under the threat of breaking the law when others
whose one year anniversary that falls later won't have to do so and are not
threatened as a result?
Whenever a law or regulation is changed, it affects the activity required by people to be in compliance with the law; changing registration requirements is not unique in that regard. DHS will continue to have the ability to require visitors to check in periodically with the department and will need to use that tool on occasion so some visitors who are currently scheduled to re-register in April may still be asked to do so individually even after the new regulation eliminates the group re-registration requirement.”
The DHS claims that NSEERS was a success and believes that the SEVIS program to track foreign students and exchange visitors and the new US-VISIT entry-exit tracking program (which starts up next month), will “take care of most of the NSEERS requirements.”
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