The
inspector general of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) recently stated
that immigrations and customs operations of the department should be combined
because they are inefficient, Reuters reports. Customs and Border Protection (CBP)
and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) were created in 2003 when 22
agencies were combined into DHS. The inspector general’s report states that
the two are incapable of coordinating their efforts and should be merged to
encourage their cooperation. The report suggests that the merge would result in
a consolidated border security agency that would be better placed to coordinate
priorities and organize resources. Senator Susan Collins, chairman of the
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, criticized the current
structure of the two entities as “dysfunctional.” CBP coordinates customs
and immigrations activities while ICE investigates customs and immigrations
enforcement cases and is responsible for the detention and removal of
undocumented aliens. The inspector general’s report stated that the lack of
intelligence sharing between the two agencies caused problems with the
apprehension and detention of undocumented immigrants, as well as the capture of
fraudulent travel documents and import and export violations.
The
inspector general’s report is available online at:
http://www.dhs.gov/dhspublic/interapp/editorial/editorial_0334.xml
*****
Sabrina
Eaton of
Cleveland
,
Ohio
’s The
Plain Dealer reports that the U.S. Department of Justice will open an
immigration court in
Ohio
next year in order to
reduce the state’s nearly 3,000-case backlog.
Ohio
has the largest backlog of
the 27 states that do not currently have their own immigration court, and
currently handles all of its immigration cases by teleconference with judges in
Virginia
. The state asked Attorney
General Alberto Gonzales last month to open a court there and argued that a
court in
Ohio
would allow judges to
evaluate cases in person and would streamline court dockets in both
Ohio
and
Virginia
. The Justice Department’s
Executive Office for Immigration Review has promised the state that it will open
a court by the end of next summer; however, it did not specify whether the court
would exclusively handle
Ohio
’s cases.
*****
A
report from the Congressional Budget Office explains that increased immigration
of low-skilled workers from
Mexico
and
Central America
may explain the slow wage
growth in the
U.S.
This influx of immigration, however, may also mean that the wage gap
between
U.S.
workers with low and high
levels of education may be smaller than it is actually thought to be. The
earnings of Latin American men in the
U.S.
are one half of those of
American-born men on average. 40
percent of recent immigrants are from
Latin America
, and have lower education
levels than the average
U.S.
worker.
The increase of foreigners in the work force has increased from 13
million to 21 million in the past ten years, which accounts for 50% of the
growth in the total
U.S.
work force.
*****
The
Washington Times
reports that a study by Rand Corp. has shown that undocumented immigrants have
comprised a third of the growth of uninsured adults from 1980 to 2000. 65
percent of undocumented immigrants in this study were uninsured, compared to 12
percent of native-born Americans, 18 percent of naturalized citizens, and 32
percent of those with green cards. The study considered Spanish and
English-speaking families in
Los Angeles
and extended this data to
the whole
U.S.
population.
The study found that undocumented immigrants are less likely to use
services such as Medicaid and other social insurance programs than native-born
Americans. Those undocumented immigrants who are covered by insurance are 50%
more likely to lose it, and lack of insurance tends to be prevalent among this
group.
*****
The
US and
Vietnam
have entered into an
agreement which allows certain Vietnamese citizens to immigrate to the
U.S.
The agreement applies to those who were eligible under the Orderly
Departure Program (
ODP
) and unable to immigrate
before the program ended in 1994.
ODP
allowed nearly 500,000
Vietnamese refugees to resettle in the
US
between 1980 and 1994.
Those who were eligible for
ODP
had to have spent at least
three years in Vietnamese re-education camps, or to have worked for the
U.S.
government before the
Vietnam War ended. In 1995,
Vietnam
and the
U.S.
restored diplomatic
relations, and trade between the two countries has soared since.