Green Card Lottery Applications Decrease as State Department Online System Fails
The
Green Card lottery has attracted less than half the usual number of applications
this fiscal year, falling from 13 million to 5 million.
The decline is due to the fact that for the first time applications are
being accepted by computer only. Government
officials say duplications and fraud have been curtailed, but immigrants and
their advocates say the falloff results from a fear of giving information to the
government online, lack of access to computers, new opportunities for immigrants
to be defrauded and a serious lack of server capacity in the lottery’s final
days that alone may have kept a million people from applying.
The
lottery is open only to those from countries that have sent fewer than 50,000
people to the United States in the past five years.
From millions of applicants, the State Department randomly selects about
110,000 winners, and sends them invitations to apply for a visa at the closest
consular office. About half of the
applicants fail to complete the process in time or are disqualified.
The supply of diversity visas goes to the rest on a first-come, first
served basis.
Some
people lack access to the tools needed to apply, such as a digital photo
scanner, a computer and an Internet connection.
Some immigrants already in the US fear that leaving a computer trail
could make them targets for deportation. Hundreds
of thousands of immigrants who thought that they were applying for the lottery
were tricked by official looking websites run by a Fort Lauderdale couple that
fraudulently collected fees for Internet lottery applications that were never
submitted.
Despite
calls by immigration advocacy groups to extend the deadline, the DOS indicated
that it had no plans to alter its procedures this year.
In the final days of the lottery, State Department servers locked out the vast majority of applicants. An estimated 900,000 applications were not accepted because DOS servers were overwhelmed. The State Department did not apologize for its failure to handle the applications. Instead, a State Department spokesman criticized applicants for waiting until the end. Critics of the State Department countered that given 15 years of history, the State Department should have known that there is always a massive surge of applications in the lottery’s final days. The DOS should have foreseen the surge and either planned properly to have adequate server capacity or warned applicants that they might not be able to submit an application in the lottery’s final days.
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