News Bytes
The State Department Visa Revalidation Unit will now only accept Form DS-156 with a bar code for visa revalidations. This form can be found on the State Department’s website at http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/7766.pdf.
*****
“SafeSend,”
a new Bank of America program allowing Mexican nationals in the United States to
wire cash home, has raised concern among law enforcement officials.
The program, which provides online access for Mexican nationals to
transfer money from “any phone or computer” to relatives or associates in
Mexico who hold a SafeSend automated teller machine card, is leading officials
to wonder if it also gives terrorists and drug smugglers a new way to route
illicit cash out of the country.
There
is a $1,500-per-transaction limit, which is below government reporting
requirements for cash transactions of $10,000 in a single day.
Spokespeople for Bank of America defend the program, as it complies with
federal law, including the USA Patriot Act, in requiring proper identification
to open an account and limiting the amount of cash that can be sent in any given
transaction.
*****
The
US Department of Homeland Security late last month ordered inspectors at the
nation’s international airports to speed the processing of foreign passengers.
International flights must now be cleared within 60 minutes of arrival.
The new one hour processing rule applies even under the code orange
threat level, which is expected to remain in effect at least through the end of
the month.
At
the same time, inspectors are taking on additional duties under the US-VISIT
program. Some inspectors maintain
that Washington is bowing to pressure from the airlines to speed up processing
of foreign passengers.
*****
NAFTA has resulted in an increase of exports from California to Mexico and an increase in illegal immigrants, pollution, and poverty from Mexico to California. According to a study co-published by the UCSD’s Center for US-Mexican Studies, illegal border crossings across the US-Mexico border increased steadily during the second half of the 1990s. The study also predicted that the flow of illegal immigration would decline within the next five years.
*****
The
Coalition for the Future of the American Worker recently produced and sold
anti-immigrant political ads that currently air on KCCI and WHO television
stations in central Iowa. The ads
are directed at the presidential candidates and encourage the candidates to
change their positions on allowing more immigrants to enter the United States.
The
ad depicts a fist hitting a punching bag printed with a human face.
A narrator talks about the negative aspects of immigration - lower wages
and taking jobs away from Iowans. The
narrator asks the viewers to “tell the candidates it’s time to take a stand
for Iowa’s workers.” Labor
leaders in Iowa have urged television stations to pull the ads.
According to 2001 US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission reports, there are currently approximately 25,600 Hispanic workers in Iowa.
< Back | Index | Next >
Disclaimer: This newsletter is provided as a public service and not intended to establish an attorney client relationship. Any reliance on information contained herein is taken at your own risk.