Report on the Enhanced Border Security and Visa Entry Reform Act Released
The
first report to systematically examine the implementation of the Enhanced Border
Security and Visa Entry Reform Act of 2002 was published this week.
The report, which was published by the Center for Immigration Studies
("CIS") and NumbersUSA Education and Research Foundation, states that
the Administration has missed a majority of the deadlines set by Congress in the
2002 visa-tracking law. CIS and NumbersUSA are both organizations that actively
against immigration to the US.
According
to the report, of the 22 mandated deadlines that have already passed, more than
half (13) were missed. Four of the
required forms from the 13 missed deadlines were eventually implemented, while
the other nine still have not been implemented.
The
Administration’s failure to report any progress on the development of an
integrated biometric-based database, or Chimera, was cited as the most important
missed deadline. This database
would give the State Department and the Department of Homeland Security
real-time access to law enforcement, immigration, and intelligence information
on every alien.
Another
problem arises with the government’s failure to check the names of all aliens
from “visa waiver” countries against terrorist watch lists at ports of
entry. This system was supposed to
be implemented with the enactment of the visa tracking law due to its importance
to national security since US consulates do not vet visa waiver aliens prior to
arrival.
In
addition, most ports of entry along the US-Mexico border are still awaiting
installation of machines that can read and compare biometric information on
Border Crossing Cards. This delay
greatly increases the chance of fraudulent use of the cards.
There
have been significant provisions that have been successfully implemented.
Among those are:
·
Creation
of an interim data-sharing system between government agencies;
·
Development
of a biometric technology standard to verify the identity of noncitizens;
·
Establishment
of terrorist lookout committees in US missions abroad;
·
Advance
electronic submission of passenger manifests by all commercial airlines and
vessels;
·
Implementation
of the foreign student tracking system (SEVIS); and
·
Submission
of an annual report on alien absconders who fail to show up for removal
following a final order of deportation.
The deadlines missed following the implementation of the Act are blamed on limited government funds for a massive reorganization project. The Act, which was signed into law in May 2002, was part of a response to the Sept. 11 attacks, along with the USA Patriot Act.
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